236 LESSON 23 04 2011Thana Sutta TraitsFreeONLINE eNālandā Research
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LESSON 236

Thana Sutta: Traits

“Monks,
these four traits may be known by means of four [other] traits. Which four?

“It’s
through living together that a person’s virtue may be known, and then only
after a long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one
who is inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning.

“It’s
through dealing with a person that his purity may be known, and then only after
a long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is
inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning.

“It’s
through adversity that a person’s endurance may be known, and then only after a
long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is
inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning.

“It’s
through discussion that a person’s discernment may be known, and then only
after a long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one
who is inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning.

[1] “‘It’s through living together that a
person’s virtue may be known, and then only after a long period, not a short
period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is inattentive; by one who is
discerning, not by one who is not discerning’: Thus was it said. And in
reference to what was it said?

“There
is the case where one individual, through living with another, knows this: ‘For
a long time this person has been torn, broken, spotted, splattered in his
actions. He hasn’t been consistent in his actions. He hasn’t practiced
consistently with regard to the precepts. He is an unprincipled person, not a
virtuous, principled one.’ And then there is the case where one individual,
through living with another, knows this: ‘For a long time this person has been
untorn, unbroken, unspotted, unsplattered in his actions. He has been
consistent in his actions. He has practiced consistently with regard to the
precepts. He is a virtuous, principled person, not an unprincipled one.’

“‘It’s
through living together that a person’s virtue may be known, and then only
after a long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one
who is inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not
discerning’: Thus was it said. And in reference to this was it said.

[2] “‘It’s through dealing with a person
that his purity may be known, and then only after a long period, not a short
period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is inattentive; by one who is
discerning, not by one who is not discerning’: Thus was it said. And in
reference to what was it said?

“There
is the case where one individual, through dealing with another, knows this:
‘This person deals one way when one-on-one, another way when with two, another
way when with three, another way when with many. His earlier dealings do not
jibe with his later dealings. He is impure in his dealings, not pure.’ And then
there is the case where one individual, through dealing with another, knows
this: ‘The way this person deals when one-on-one, is the same way he deals when
with two, when with three, when with many. His earlier dealings jibe with his
later dealings. He is pure in his dealings, not impure.’

“‘It’s
through dealing with a person that his purity may be known, and then only after
a long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is
inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning’: Thus
was it said. And in reference to this was it said.

[3] “‘It’s through adversity that a
person’s endurance may be known, and then only after a long period, not a short
period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is inattentive; by one who is
discerning, not by one who is not discerning’: Thus was it said. And in
reference to what was it said?

“There
is the case where a person, suffering loss of relatives, loss of wealth, or
loss through disease, does not reflect: ‘That’s how it is when living together
in the world. That’s how it is when gaining a personal identity.[1]
When there is living in the world, when there is the gaining of a personal
identity, these eight worldly conditions spin after the world, and the world
spins after these eight worldly conditions: gain, loss, status, disgrace,
censure, praise, pleasure, & pain.’ Suffering loss of relatives, loss of
wealth, or loss through disease, he sorrows, grieves, & laments, beats his
breast, becomes distraught. And then there is the case where a person,
suffering loss of relatives, loss of wealth, or loss through disease, reflects:
‘That’s how it is when living together in the world. That’s how it is when
gaining a personal identity. When there is living in the world, when there is
the gaining of a personal identity, these eight worldly conditions spin after
the world, and the world spins after these eight worldly conditions: gain,
loss, status, disgrace, censure, praise, pleasure, & pain.’ Suffering loss
of relatives, loss of wealth, or loss through disease, he does not sorrow,
grieve, or lament, does not beat his breast or become distraught.

“‘It’s
through adversity that a person’s endurance may be known, and then only after a
long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is
inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning’: Thus
was it said. And in reference to this was it said.

[4] “‘It’s through discussion that a
person’s discernment may be known, and then only after a long period, not a
short period; by one who is attentive, not by one who is inattentive; by one
who is discerning, not by one who is not discerning’: Thus was it said. And in
reference to what was it said?

“There
is the case where one individual, through discussion with another, knows this:
‘From the way this person rises to an issue, from the way he applies [his
reasoning], from the way he addresses a question, he is dull, not discerning.
Why is that? He does not make statements that are deep, tranquil, refined,
beyond the scope of conjecture, subtle, to-be-experienced by the wise. He
cannot declare the meaning, teach it, describe it, set it forth, reveal it,
explain it, or make it plain. He is dull, not discerning.’ Just as
if a man with good eyesight standing on the shore of a body of water were to
see a small fish rise. The thought would occur to him, ‘From the rise of this
fish, from the break of its ripples, from its speed, it is a small fish, not a
large one.’ In the same way, one individual, in discussion with another, knows
this: ‘From the way this person rises to an issue, from the way he applies [his
reasoning], from the way he addresses a question… he is dull, not
discerning.’

“And
then there is the case where one individual, through discussion with another,
knows this: ‘From the way this person rises to an issue, from the way he
applies [his reasoning], from the way he addresses a question, he is discerning,
not dull. Why is that? He makes statements that are deep, tranquil, refined,
beyond the scope of conjecture, subtle, to-be-experienced by the wise. He can
declare the meaning, teach it, describe it, set it forth, reveal it, explain
it, & make it plain. He is discerning, not dull.’ Just as if a man with
good eyesight standing on the shore of a body of water were to see a large fish
rise. The thought would occur to him, ‘From the rise of this fish, from the
break of its ripples, from its speed, it is a large fish, not a small one.’ In
the same way, one individual, in discussion with another, knows this: ‘From the
way this person rises to an issue, from the way he applies [his reasoning],
from the way he addresses a question… he is discerning, not dull.’

“‘It’s
through discussion that a person’s discernment may be known, and then only
after a long period, not a short period; by one who is attentive, not by one
who is inattentive; by one who is discerning, not by one who is not
discerning’: Thus was it said. And in reference to this was it said.

“These,
monks, are the four traits that may be known by means of these four [other]
traits.”

POLITICS
is SACRED with GOOD GOVERNANCE

Mayawati: why no Scheduled
Caste on Lokpal panel?

Uttar
Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati on Friday criticised the Centre, the Congress
and civil society for not including any SC member in the Jan Lokpal Bill
drafting committee.

At
a press conference here, Ms. Mayawati invoked Dr. Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar
and his contribution to the socio-economic uplift of the downtrodden sections
to drive home her point. Even after 63 years of independence, was not a single
SC member found suitable to be on the drafting panel?

In
a pointed reference to Gandhian Anna Hazare, Ms. Mayawati said he came from a
State, which has had a history of struggle for the socio-economic development
of the SCs and the STs. Dr. Ambedkar was also from Maharashtra. “Mr. Hazare
should have considered these aspects before naming the civil society members.”

The
“mistake” should be rectified by including an SC member from a non-political
background.

Referring
to the controversy surrounding the Bhushans but without naming them, Ms.
Mayawati suggested that the panel distance itself from members whose integrity
was in doubt.

235 LESSON 22 04 2011 Mahaparinibbana Sutta Last Days of the Buddha FreeONLINE eNālandā Research and Practice UNIVERSITY and BUDDHIST GOOD NEWS letterto VOTE for BSP ELEPHANT for Social Transformation and Economic Emancipation to attain Ultimate Bliss-Through http://sarvajan.ambedkar.org

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LESSON 235COURSE PROGRAM

Maha-parinibbana Sutta: Last Days of the Buddha

Foreword

which is offered here is a work of collaboration, but is based upon a text prepared by Sister Vajira of Germany,
to whom credit for the initial work must be given. The final revision
of the text was done by Mr Francis Story. The notes and references
which, it is hoped, will help in the understanding of the text have been
contributed by the Venerable Nyanaponika Mahathera, much of the
material for them being taken from the Pali Commentary.

Every
effort has been made to give a faithful rendering of the original Pali.
The greater part of the sutta is straight forward narrative, but it
also includes references to profound aspects of the Dhamma, which have
to be understood in their precise meaning if the full import of the
Buddha’s last exhortations is to be conveyed. In the choice which
inevitably arises between terminological exactitude and literary form,
the translators have endeavoured to preserve the former with as little
sacrifice as possible of the latter. Those who understand the
difficulties of Pali translation will appreciate that this is no easy
task, and will readily overlook the absence of those literary graces
which only a freer rendering would have permitted.

As in previous translations, some repetitions have been omitted and some repetitive passages condensed.

— Buddhist Publication Society

Foreword to the Revised Edition

In this revised edition of Last Days of the Buddha, a number of stylistic changes have been made, aimed at improved readability. The word “Bhagava,”
untranslated in the original edition, has been replaced by “the Blessed
One”; several archaic expressions, which gave a slightly Biblical
flavour to the diction, have been replaced by their modern counterparts;
awkward sentences have been reformulated; and greater consistency was
aimed at in the rendering of certain terms and expressions. The notes
have also been revised in certain respects. The titles of the chapters
and sections have been supplied by the translator and editors, though
the division of the work into six recitation units dates back to the
period when the Canon was transmitted orally from one generation to the
next.

Introduction

Of
the thirty-four discourses (suttas) that make up the Digha Nikaya
(Collection of Long Discourses), ours, the sixteenth, is the longest,
and so altogether maintains the first place where length is concerned.

It
preserves the principal feature of the Buddhist sutta, insofar as it
is, like others, a rehearsal of events as they have been witnessed. On
account of its unique composition, however, it is, more than other
suttas, capable not only of winning the affection of the pious Buddhist,
as it naturally does, but also of attracting the general reader, since
it is indeed a fine specimen of sacred universal literature.

It
gives a good general idea of the Buddha’s Teaching, too, even though it
hardly offers anything that is not found — and often more extensively
dealt with — in other suttas.

At
the end of his life, after almost half a century’s ministry, the Master
had long since taught all that was necessary for attaining the ideal.
During the last period his primary concern, therefore, was to impress on
his followers the necessity of unflinchingly putting into practice
those very same teachings: an appeal that could, of course, hardly fail
in stirring their hearts more than ever before.

The
Sangha came, indeed, to witness the greatest event in its history, and
was keenly aware of it, especially since the Master had announced his
Parinibbana three months ahead. The impression on the bhikkhus who
flocked to him in large numbers as he was pressing northward was
tremendous, and could not fail to be reflected vividly in the oral
account. (The Buddhist canon was originally, as is well known,
altogether oral.) Because of its particular import and abundance, this
material was soon formed into one body; and so our sutta came to be.

In
this connection, it is hardly possible not to remember gratefully the
Venerable Ananda. His share in the preservation of the Master’s word is
paramount to any other bhikkhu’s, and his figure is inseparable from our
texts. This was to become manifest for all time in the Maha-parinibbana
Sutta, which is plainly unimaginable without him. For it is Ananda, and
again Ananda, whom the Master addresses, having tested for twenty-five
years his sure grasp and brilliant memory and also his indefatigable
personal devotion. But Ananda too, here more than elsewhere, by his
constant queries, worries, and amazements, becomes without intending it a
central figure beside the Master himself, which undoubtedly increases
the attractiveness of the text. Thus, then, Ananda, gentle and pleasant
as his name, and yet almost throughout his career incurring the reproach
of the brethren, was immortalized along with his beloved Master, and —
as we may add — along with his strange position between praise and
blame, assuming mystic character in the third chapter.

The
third chapter, almost exclusively, is devoted to depicting the
circumstances connected with the Master’s relinquishment of life, which
is the dramatic culmination of events. It overwhelmingly drives home the
purely metaphysical significance of the Parinibbana, or at least ought
to do so. For the Buddha neither succumbed to his fatal illness nor did
he give way to the appeal of Mara (which is identical with the
non-appeal of Ananda), but sovereignly let go of existence at a timely
hour, just as forty-five years earlier, on becoming fully awakened, he
had duly taken upon himself the wearisome task of teaching men. This
fact is most thought-provoking, and consistently leads to the conclusion
that by his Parinibbana, indeed, the Buddha bore the last and highest
possible testimony to his Teaching, which permits of no lingering
inclination to self-preservation and continuance, but on the contrary
reaches the highest exultation ending it all. The Master’s Parinibbana
is, therefore, the one sorrowful event in the history of Buddhism that
turns out, in its true meaning, to be really the most blissful.

— Sister VajiraCeylonMay 1961

Part One: In Magadha

1. Thus have I heard. Once the Blessed One [1] dwelt at Rajagaha, on the hill called Vultures’ Peak. At that time the king of Magadha, Ajatasattu, son of the Videhi queen, [2] desired to wage war against the Vajjis.
He spoke in this fashion: “These Vajjis, powerful and glorious as they
are, I shall annihilate them, I shall make them perish, I shall utterly
destroy them.”

2. And Ajatasattu, the king of Magadha, addressed his chief minister, the brahman Vassakara,
saying: “Come, brahman, go to the Blessed One, pay homage in my name at
his feet, wish him good health, strength, ease, vigour, and comfort,
and speak thus: ‘O Lord, Ajatasattu, the king of Magadha, desires to
wage war against the Vajjis. He has spoken in this fashion: “These
Vajjis, powerful and glorious as they are, I shall annihilate them, I
shall make them perish, I shall utterly destroy them.”‘ And whatever the
Blessed One should answer you, keep it well in mind and inform me; for
Tathagatas [3] do not speak falsely.”

3.
“Very well, sire,” said the brahman Vassakara in assent to Ajatasattu,
king of Magadha. And he ordered a large number of magnificent carriages
to be made ready, mounted one himself, and accompanied by the rest,
drove out to Rajagaha towards Vultures’ Peak. He went by carriage as far
as the carriage could go, then dismounting, he approached the Blessed
One on foot. After exchanging courteous greetings with the Blessed One,
together with many pleasant words, he sat down at one side and addressed
the Blessed One thus: “Venerable Gotama, Ajatasattu, the king of
Magadha, pays homage at the feet of the Venerable Gotama and wishes him
good health, strength, ease, vigour, and comfort. He desires to wage war
against the Vajjis, and he has spoken in this fashion: ‘These Vajjis,
powerful and glorious as they are, I shall annihilate them, I shall make
them perish, I shall utterly destroy them.’”

Conditions of a Nation’s Welfare

4. At that time the Venerable Ananda [4]
was standing behind the Blessed One, fanning him, and the Blessed One
addressed the Venerable Ananda thus: “What have you heard, Ananda: do
the Vajjis have frequent gatherings, and are their meetings well
attended?”

“I have heard, Lord, that this is so.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.

“What have you heard, Ananda: do the Vajjis assemble and disperse peacefully and attend to their affairs in concord?”

“I have heard, Lord, that they do.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.

“What
have you heard, Ananda: do the Vajjis neither enact new decrees nor
abolish existing ones, but proceed in accordance with their ancient
constitutions?”

“I have heard, Lord, that they do.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.

“What
have you heard, Ananda: do the Vajjis show respect, honour, esteem, and
veneration towards their elders and think it worthwhile to listen to
them?”

“I have heard, Lord, that they do.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.

“What have you heard, Ananda: do the Vajjis refrain from abducting women and maidens of good families and from detaining them?”

“I have heard, Lord, that they refrain from doing so.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.

“What
have you heard, Ananda: do the Vajjis show respect, honor, esteem, and
veneration towards their shrines, both those within the city and those
outside it, and do not deprive them of the due offerings as given and
made to them formerly?”

“I have heard, Lord, that they do venerate their shrines, and that they do not deprive them of their offerings.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.

“What
have you heard, Ananda: do the Vajjis duly protect and guard the
arahats, so that those who have not come to the realm yet might do so,
and those who have already come might live there in peace?”

“I have heard, Lord, that they do.”

“So long, Ananda, as this is the case, the growth of the Vajjis is to be expected, not their decline.”

5. And the Blessed One addressed the brahman Vassakara in these words: “Once, brahman, I dwelt at Vesali, at the Sarandada shrine, and there it was that I taught the Vajjis these seven conditions leading to (a nation’s) welfare. [5]
So long, brahman, as these endure among the Vajjis, and the Vajjis are
known for it, their growth is to be expected, not their decline.”

Thereupon
the brahman Vassakara spoke thus to the Blessed One: “If the Vajjis,
Venerable Gotama, were endowed with only one or another of these
conditions leading to welfare, their growth would have to be expected,
not their decline. What then of all the seven? No harm, indeed, can be
done to the Vajjis in battle by Magadha’s king, Ajatasattu, except
through treachery or discord. Well, then, Venerable Gotama, we will take
our leave, for we have much to perform, much work to do.”

“Do
as now seems fit to you, brahman.” And the brahman Vassakara, the chief
minister of Magadha, approving of the Blessed One’s words and delighted
by them, rose from his seat and departed.

Welfare of the Bhikkhus

6.
Then, soon after Vassakara’s departure, the Blessed One addressed the
Venerable Ananda thus: “Go now, Ananda, and assemble in the hall of
audience as many bhikkhus as live around Rajagaha.”

“Very
well, Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda did as he was requested and
informed the Blessed One: “The community of bhikkhus is assembled, Lord.
Now let the Blessed One do as he wishes.”

Thereupon
the Blessed One rose from his seat, went up to the hall of audience,
took his appointed seat there, and addressed the bhikkhus thus: “Seven
conditions leading to welfare I shall set forth, bhikkhus. Listen and
pay heed to what I shall say.”

“So be it, Lord.”

“The
growth of the bhikkhus is to be expected, not their decline, bhikkhus,
so long as they assemble frequently and in large numbers; meet and
disperse peacefully and attend to the affairs of the Sangha in concord;
so long as they appoint no new rules, and do not abolish the existing
ones, but proceed in accordance with the code of training (Vinaya) laid
down; so long as they show respect, honour, esteem, and veneration
towards the elder bhikkhus, those of long standing, long gone forth, the
fathers and leaders of the Sangha, and think it worthwhile to listen to
them; so long as they do not come under the power of the craving that
leads to fresh becoming; so long as they cherish the forest depths for
their dwellings; so long as they establish themselves in mindfulness, so
that virtuous brethren of the Order who have not come yet might do so,
and those already come might live in peace; so long, bhikkhus, as these
seven conditions leading to welfare endure among the bhikkhus and the
bhikkhus are known for it, their growth is to be expected, not their
decline.

7. “Seven further conditions leading to welfare I shall set forth, bhikkhus. Listen and pay heed to what I shall say.”

“So be it, Lord.”

“The
growth of the bhikkhus is to be expected, not their decline, bhikkhus,
so long as they do not delight in, are not pleased with, and are not
fond of activities, talk, sleep, and company; so long as they do not
harbour, do not come under the spell of evil desires; have no bad
friends, associates, or companions; and so long as they do not stop
halfway on account of some trifling achievement. So long, bhikkhus, as
these seven conditions leading to welfare endure among the bhikkhus and
the bhikkhus are known for it, their growth is to be expected, not their
decline.

8. “Seven further conditions leading to welfare I shall set forth, bhikkhus. Listen and pay heed to what I shall say.”

“So be it, Lord.”

“The
growth of the bhikkhus is to be expected, not their decline, bhikkhus,
so long as they shall have faith, so long as they have moral shame and
fear of misconduct, are proficient in learning, resolute, mindful, and
wise. So long, bhikkhus, as these seven conditions leading to welfare
endure among the bhikkhus, and the bhikkhus are known for it, their
growth is to be expected, not their decline.

9. “Seven further conditions leading to welfare I shall set forth, bhikkhus. Listen and pay heed to what I shall say.”

“So be it, Lord.”

“The
growth of the bhikkhus is to be expected, not their decline, bhikkhus,
so long as they cultivate the seven factors of awakenment, that is:
mindfulness, investigation into phenomena, energy, bliss, tranquillity,
concentration, and equanimity. So long, bhikkhus, as these seven
conditions leading to welfare endure among the bhikkhus, and the
bhikkhus are known for it, their growth is to be expected, not their
decline.

10. “Seven further conditions leading to welfare I shall set forth, bhikkhus. Listen and pay heed to what I shall say.”

“So be it, Lord.”

“The
growth of the bhikkhus is to be expected, not their decline, bhikkhus,
so long as they cultivate the perception of impermanence, of
egolessness, of (the body’s) impurity, of (the body’s) wretchedness, of
relinquishment, of dispassion, and of cessation. So long, bhikkhus, as
these seven conditions leading to welfare endure among the bhikkhus, and
the bhikkhus are known for it, their growth is to be expected, not
their decline.

11. “Six further conditions leading to welfare I shall set forth, bhikkhus. Listen and pay heed to what I shall say.”

“So be it, Lord.”

“The
growth of the bhikkhus is to be expected, not their decline, bhikkhus,
so long as they attend on each other with loving-kindness in deed, word,
and thought, both openly and in private; so long as in respect of what
they receive as due offerings, even the contents of their alms bowls,
they do not make use of them without sharing them with virtuous members
of the community; so long as, in company with their brethren, they train
themselves, openly and in private, in the rules of conduct, which are
complete and perfect, spotless and pure, liberating, praised by the
wise, uninfluenced (by mundane concerns), and favourable to
concentration of mind; and in company with their brethren, preserve,
openly and in private, the insight that is noble and liberating, and
leads one who acts upon it to the utter destruction of suffering. So
long, bhikkhus, as these six conditions leading to welfare endure among
the bhikkhus, and the bhikkhus are known for it, their growth is to be
expected, not their decline.

Counsel to the Bhikkhus

12. And the Blessed One, living at Rajagaha, at the hill called Vultures’ Peak, often gave counsel to the bhikkhus thus:

“Such and such is virtue; such and such is concentration; and such and such is wisdom. [9]
Great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of concentration when it is
fully developed by virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit, great is
the gain of wisdom when it is fully developed by concentration; utterly
freed from the taints [10] of lust, becoming, and ignorance is the mind that is fully developed in wisdom.”

13.
When the Blessed One had stayed at Rajagaha as long as he pleased, he
addressed the Venerable Ananda thus: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Ambalatthika.”

“So be it, Lord.”

And the Blessed One took up his abode at Ambalatthika, together with a large community of bhikkhus.

14.
At Ambalatthika the Blessed One came to stay in the king’s rest house;
and there, too, the Blessed One often gave counsel to the bhikkhus thus:

“Such
and such is virtue; such and such is concentration; and such and such
is wisdom. Great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of concentration
when it is fully developed by virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit,
great is the gain of wisdom when it is fully developed by
concentration; utterly freed from the taints of lust, becoming, and
ignorance is the mind that is fully developed in wisdom.”

15.
When the Blessed One had stayed at Ambalatthika as long as he pleased,
he addressed the Venerable Ananda thus: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Nalanda.”

“So be it, Lord.”

And
the Blessed One took up his abode at Nalanda together with a large
community of bhikkhus, and came to stay in the mango grove of Pavarika.

16. Then the Venerable Sariputta went to the Blessed One, respectfully greeted him, sat down at one side, and spoke thus to him:

“This
faith, Lord, I have in the Blessed One, that there has not been, there
will not be, nor is there now, another recluse or brahman more exalted
in Awakenment than the Blessed One.”

“Lofty
indeed is this speech of yours, Sariputta, and lordly! A bold
utterance, a veritable sounding of the lion’s roar! But how is this,
Sariputta? Those Arahants, Fully Awakened Ones of the past — do you have
direct personal knowledge of all those Blessed Ones, as to their
virtue, their meditation, [12] their wisdom, their abiding, and their emancipation?” [13]

“Not so, Lord.”

“Then
how is this, Sariputta? Those Arahants, Fully Awakened Ones of the
future — do you have direct personal knowledge of all those Blessed
Ones, as to their virtue, their meditation, their wisdom, their abiding,
and their emancipation?”

“Not so, Lord.”

“Then
how is this, Sariputta? Of me, who am at present the Arahant, the Fully
Awakened One, do you have direct personal knowledge as to my virtue, my
meditation, my wisdom, my abiding, and my emancipation?”

“Not so, Lord.”

“Then
it is clear, Sariputta, that you have no such direct personal knowledge
of the Arahats, the Fully Awakened Ones of the past, the future, and
the present. How then dare you set forth a speech so lofty and lordly,
an utterance so bold, a veritable sounding of the lion’s roar, saying:
‘This faith, Lord, I have in the Blessed One, that there has not been,
there will not be, nor is there now another recluse or brahman more
exalted in Awakenment than the Blessed One’?”

17.
“No such direct personal knowledge, indeed, is mine, Lord, of the
Arahants, the Fully Awakened Ones of the past, the future, and the
present; and yet I have come to know the lawfulness of the Dhamma.
Suppose, Lord, a king’s frontier fortress was strongly fortified, with
strong ramparts and turrets, and it had a single gate, and there was a
gatekeeper, intelligent, experienced, and prudent, who would keep out
the stranger but allow the friend to enter. As he patrols the path that
leads all around the fortress, he does not perceive a hole or fissure in
the ramparts even big enough to allow a cat to slip through. So he
comes to the conclusion: ‘Whatever grosser living things are to enter or
leave this city, they will all have to do so just by this gate.’ In the
same way, Lord, I have come to know the lawfulness of the Dhamma.

“For, Lord, all the Blessed Ones, Arahants, Fully Awakened Ones of the past had abandoned the five hindrances, [14] the mental defilements that weaken wisdom; had well established their minds in the four foundations of mindfulness; [15] had duly cultivated the seven factors of awakenment, and were fully Awakened in unsurpassed, supreme Awakenment.

“And,
Lord, all the Blessed Ones, Arahants, Fully Awakened Ones of the future
will abandon the five hindrances, the mental defilements that weaken
wisdom; will well establish their minds in the four foundations of
mindfulness; will duly cultivate the seven factors of awakenment, and
will be fully awakened in unsurpassed, supreme Awakenment.

“And
the Blessed One too, Lord, being at present the Arahant, the Fully
Awakened One, has abandoned the five hindrances, the mental defilements
that weaken wisdom; has well established his mind in the four
foundations of mindfulness; has duly cultivated the seven factors of
awakenment, and is fully awakened in unsurpassed, supreme Awakenment.”

18. And also in Nalanda, in the mango grove of Pavarika, the Blessed One often gave counsel to the bhikkhus thus:

“Such
and such is virtue; such and such is concentration; and such and such
is wisdom. Great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of concentration
when it is fully developed by virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit,
great is the gain of wisdom when it is fully developed by
concentration; utterly freed from the taints of lust, becoming, and
ignorance is the mind that is fully developed in wisdom.”

19. When the Blessed One had stayed at Nalanda as long as he pleased, he addressed the Venerable Ananda thus:

And the Blessed One took up his abode at Pataligama together with a large community of bhikkhus.

20.
Then the devotees of Pataligama came to know: “The Blessed One, they
say, has arrived at Pataligama.” And they approached the Blessed One,
respectfully greeted him, sat down at one side, and addressed him thus:
“May the Blessed One, Lord, kindly visit our council hall.” And the
Blessed One consented by his silence.

21.
Knowing the Blessed One’s consent, the devotees of Pataligama rose from
their seats, respectfully saluted him, and keeping their right sides
towards him, departed for the council hall. Then they prepared the
council hall by covering the floor all over, arranging seats and water,
and setting out an oil lamp. Having done this, they returned to the
Blessed One, respectfully greeted him, and standing at one side,
announced: “Lord, the council hall is ready, with the floor covered all
over, seats and water prepared, and an oil lamp has been set out. Let
the Blessed One come, Lord, at his convenience.

22.
And the Blessed One got ready, and taking his bowl and robe, went to
the council hall together with the company of bhikkhus. After rinsing
his feet, the Blessed One entered the council hall and took his seat
close to the middle pillar, facing east. The community of bhikkhus,
after rinsing their feet, also entered the council hall and took seats
near the western wall, facing east, so that the Blessed One was before
them. And the devotees of Pataligama, after rinsing their feet and
entering the council hall, sat down near the eastern wall, facing west,
so that the Blessed One was in front of them.

The Fruits of an Immoral and a Moral Life

23.
Thereupon the Blessed One addressed the devotees of Pataligama thus:
“The immoral man, householders, by falling away from virtue, encounters
five perils: great loss of wealth through heedlessness; an evil
reputation; a timid and troubled demeanour in every society, be it that
of nobles, brahmans, householders, or ascetics; death in bewilderment;
and, at the breaking up of the body after death, rebirth in a realm of
misery, in an unhappy state, in the nether world, in hell.

24.
“Five blessings, householders, accrue to the righteous man through his
practice of virtue: great increase of wealth through his diligence; a
favourable reputation; a confident deportment, without timidity, in
every society, be it that of nobles, brahmans, householders, or
ascetics; a serene death; and, at the breaking up of the body after
death, rebirth in a happy state, in a heavenly world.”

25.
And the Blessed One spent much of the night instructing the devotees of
Pataligama in the Dhamma, rousing, edifying, and gladdening them, after
which he dismissed them, saying: “The night is far advanced,
householders. You may go at your convenience.

“So
be it, Lord.” And the devotees of Pataligama rose from their seats,
respectfully saluted the Blessed One, and keeping their right sides
towards him, departed. And the Blessed One, soon after their departure,
retired into privacy.

26. At that time Sunidha
and Vassakara, the chief ministers of Magadha, were building a fortress
at Pataligama in defense against the Vajjis. And deities in large
numbers, counted in thousands, had taken possession of sites at
Pataligama. In the region where deities of great power prevailed,
officials of great power were bent on constructing edifices; and where
deities of medium power and lesser power prevailed, officials of medium
and lesser power were bent on constructing edifices.

27.
And the Blessed One saw with the heavenly eye, pure and transcending
the faculty of men, the deities, counted in thousands, where they had
taken possession of sites in Pataligama. And rising before the night was
spent, towards dawn, the Blessed One addressed the Venerable Ananda
thus: “Who is it, Ananda, that is erecting a city at Pataligama?”

“Sunidha
and Vassakara, Lord, the chief ministers of Magadha, are building a
fortress at Pataligama, in defence against the Vajjis.”

28.
“It is, Ananda, as if Sunidha and Vassakara had taken counsel with the
gods of the Thirty-three. For I beheld, Ananda, with the heavenly eye,
pure and transcending the faculty of men, a large number of deities,
counted in thousands, that have taken possession of sites at Pataligama.
In the region where deities of great power prevail, officials of great
power are bent on constructing edifices; and where deities of medium and
lesser power prevail, officials of medium and lesser power are bent on
constructing edifices. Truly, Ananda, as far as the Aryan race extends
and trade routes spread, this will be the foremost city Pataliputta, a trade-center. [16] But Pataliputta, Ananda, will be assailed by three perils — fire, water, and dissension.”

29.
Then Sunidha and Vassakara went to the Blessed One, and after courteous
greeting to the Blessed One, and exchanging many pleasant words, they
stood at one side and addressed him thus: “May the Venerable Gotama
please accept our invitation for tomorrow’s meal, together with the
community of bhikkhus.” And the Blessed One consented by his silence.

30.
Knowing the Blessed One’s consent, Sunidha and Vassakara departed for
their own abodes, where they had choice food, hard and soft, prepared.
And when it was time, they announced to the Blessed One: “It is time,
Venerable Gotama; the meal is ready.”

Thereupon
the Blessed One got ready in the forenoon, and taking bowl and robe, he
went together with the community of bhikkhus to the abode of Sunidha
and Vassakara, where he took the seat prepared for him. And Sunidha and
Vassakara themselves attended on the community of bhikkhus headed by the
Buddha, and served them with choice food, hard and soft. When the
Blessed One had finished his meal and had removed his hand from the
bowl, they took low seats and sat down at one side.

Crossing the Ganges

32.
Then Sunidha and Vassakara followed behind the Blessed One, step by
step, saying: “Through whichever gate the recluse Gotama will depart
today, that we will name the Gotama-gate; and the ford by which he will
cross the river Ganges shall be named the Gotama-ford.” And so it came
to pass, where the gate was concerned.

33. But when the Blessed One came to the river Ganges,
it was full to the brim, so that crows could drink from it. And some
people went in search of a boat or float, while others tied up a raft,
because they desired to get across. But the Blessed One, as quickly as a
strong man might stretch out his bent arm or draw in his outstretched
arm, vanished from this side of the river Ganges, and came to stand on
the yonder side.

34.
And the Blessed One saw the people who desired to cross searching for a
boat or float, while others were binding rafts. And then the Blessed
One, seeing them thus, gave forth the solemn utterance:

They who have bridged the ocean vast,

Leaving the lowlands far behind,

While others still their frail rafts bind,

Are saved by wisdom unsurpassed.

Part Two: The Journey to Vesali

The Four Noble Truths

1. Now the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Kotigama.”

“So be it, Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode at Kotigama together with a large community of bhikkhus.

2.
And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Bhikkhus, it is
through not realizing, through not penetrating the Four Noble Truths
that this long course of birth and death has been passed through and
undergone by me as well as by you. What are these four? They are the
noble truth of suffering; the noble truth of the origin of suffering;
the noble truth of the cessation of suffering; and the noble truth of
the way to the cessation of suffering. But now, bhikkhus, that these
have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the craving for existence,
destroyed is that which leads to renewed becoming, and there is no
fresh becoming.”

3. Thus it was said by the Blessed One. And the Happy One, the Master, further said:

Through not seeing the Four Noble Truths,

Long was the weary path from birth to birth.

When these are known, removed is rebirth’s cause,

The root of sorrow plucked; then ends rebirth.

4.
And also at Kotigama the Blessed One often gave counsel to the bhikkhus
thus: “Such and such is virtue; such and such is concentration; and
such and such is wisdom. Great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of
concentration when it is fully developed by virtuous conduct; great
becomes the fruit, great is the gain of wisdom when it is fully
developed by concentration; utterly freed from the taints of lust,
becoming, and ignorance is the mind that is fully developed in wisdom.”

5.
When the Blessed One had stayed at Kotigama as long as he pleased, he
spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Nadika.”

“So
be it, Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode in Nadika together
with a large community of bhikkhus, staying in the Brick House.

6.
Then the Venerable Ananda approached the Blessed One and, after
greeting him respectfully, sat down at one side. And he said to the
Blessed One: “Here in Nadika, Lord, there have passed away the bhikkhu Salha and the bhikkhuni Nanda. Likewise there have passed away the layman Sudatta and the laywoman Sujata; likewise the layman Kakudha, Kalinga, Nikata, Katissabha, Tuttha, Santuttha, Bhadda, and Subhadda. What is their destiny, Lord? What is their future state?”

7.
“The bhikkhu Salha, Ananda, through the destruction of the taints in
this very lifetime has attained to the taint-free deliverance of mind
and deliverance through wisdom, having directly known and realized it by
himself. [17]

“The
bhikkhuni Nanda, Ananda, through the destruction of the five lower
fetters (that bind beings to the world of the senses), has arisen
spontaneously (among the Suddhavasa deities) and will come to final
cessation in that very place, not liable to return from that world.

“The
layman Sudatta, Ananda, through the destruction of the three fetters
(self-belief, doubt, and faith in the efficacy of rituals and
observances), and the lessening of lust, hatred, and delusion, has
become a once-returner and is bound to make an end of suffering after
having returned but once more to this world.

“The
laywoman Sujata, Ananda, through the destruction of the three fetters
has become a stream-enterer, and is safe from falling into the states of
misery, assured, and bound for Enlightenment.

“The
layman Kakudha, Ananda, through the destruction of the five lower
fetters (that bind beings to the world of the senses), has arisen
spontaneously (among the Suddhavasa deities), and will come to final
cessation in that very place, not liable to return from that world.

“So
it is with Kalinga, Nikata, Katissabha, Tuttha, Santuttha, Bhadda, and
Subhadda, and with more than fifty laymen in Nadika. More than ninety
laymen who have passed away in Nadika, Ananda, through the destruction
of the three fetters, and the lessening of lust, hatred, and delusion,
have become once-returners and are bound to make an end of suffering
after having returned but once more to this world.

“More
than five hundred laymen who have passed away in Nadika, Ananda,
through the complete destruction of the three fetters have become
stream-enterers, and are safe from falling into the states of misery,
assured, and bound for Enlightenment.

The Mirror of the Dhamma

8. “But truly,
Ananda, it is nothing strange that human beings should die. But if each
time it happens you should come to the Tathagata and ask about them in
this manner, indeed it would be troublesome to him. Therefore, Ananda, I
will give you the teaching called the Mirror of the Dhamma, possessing
which the noble disciple, should he so desire, can declare of himself:
‘There is no more rebirth for me in hell, nor as an animal or ghost, nor
in any realm of woe. A stream-enterer am I, safe from falling into the
states of misery, assured am I and bound for Enlightenment.’”

9.
“And what, Ananda, is that teaching called the Mirror of Dhamma,
possessing which the noble disciple may thus declare of himself?

“In
this case, Ananda, the noble disciple possesses unwavering faith in the
Buddha thus: ‘The Blessed One is an Arahant, the Fully Enlightened One,
perfect in knowledge and conduct, the Happy One, the knower of the
world, the paramount trainer of beings, the teacher of gods and men, the
Enlightened One, the Blessed One.’

“He possesses unwavering faith in the Dhamma thus: ‘Well propounded by the Blessed One is the Dhamma, evident, timeless, [18] inviting investigation, leading to emancipation, to be comprehended by the wise, each for himself.’

“He
possesses unwavering faith in the Blessed One’s Order of Disciples
thus: ‘Well faring is the Blessed One’s Order of Disciples, righteously,
wisely, and dutifully: that is to say, the four pairs of men, the eight
classes of persons. The Blessed One’s Order of Disciples is worthy of
honor, of hospitality, of offerings, of veneration — the supreme field
for meritorious deeds in the world.’

“And
he possesses virtues that are dear to the Noble Ones, complete and
perfect, spotless and pure, which are liberating, praised by the wise,
uninfluenced (by worldly concerns), and favorable to concentration of
mind.

10.
“This, Ananda, is the teaching called the Mirror of the Dhamma, whereby
the noble disciple may thus know of himself: ‘There is no more rebirth
for me in hell, nor as an animal or ghost, nor in any realm of woe. A
stream-enterer am I, safe from falling into the states of misery,
assured am I and bound for Enlightenment.’”

11.
And also in Nadika, in the Brick House, the Blessed One often gave
counsel to the bhikkhus thus: “Such and such is virtue; such and such is
concentration; and such and such is wisdom. Great becomes the fruit,
great is the gain of concentration when it is fully developed by
virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of wisdom
when it is fully developed by concentration; utterly freed from the
taints of lust, becoming, and ignorance is the mind that is fully
developed in wisdom.”

12.
When the Blessed One had stayed in Nadika as long as he pleased, he
spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us go to
Vesali.”

“So
be it, O Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode in Vesali
together with a large community of bhikkhus, and stayed in Ambapali’s
grove.

Mindfulness and Clear Comprehension

13.
Then the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Mindful should
you dwell, bhikkhus, clearly comprehending; thus I exhort you.

14.
“And how, bhikkhus, is a bhikkhu mindful? When he dwells contemplating
the body in the body, earnestly, clearly comprehending, and mindfully,
after having overcome desire and sorrow in regard to the world; and when
he dwells contemplating feelings in feelings, the mind in the mind, and
mental objects in mental objects, earnestly, clearly comprehending, and
mindfully, after having overcome desire and sorrow in regard to the
world, then is he said to be mindful.

15.
“And how, bhikkhus, does a bhikkhu have clear comprehension? When he
remains fully aware of his coming and going, his looking forward and his
looking away, his bending and stretching, his wearing of his robe and
carrying of his bowl, his eating and drinking, masticating and savoring,
his defecating and urinating, his walking, standing, sitting, lying
down, going to sleep or keeping awake, his speaking or being silent,
then is he said to have clear comprehension.

Ambapali and the Licchavis

16. Then Ambapali
the courtesan came to know: “The Blessed One, they say, has arrived at
Vesali and is now staying in my Mango Grove.” And she ordered a large
number of magnificent carriages to be made ready, mounted one of them
herself, and accompanied by the rest, drove out from Vesali towards her
park. She went by carriage as far as the carriage could go, then
alighted; and approaching the Blessed One on foot, she respectfully
greeted him and sat down at one side. And the Blessed One instructed
Ambapali the courtesan in the Dhamma and roused, edified, and gladdened
her.

17.
Thereafter Ambapali the courtesan spoke to the Blessed One, saying:
“May the Blessed One, O Lord, please accept my invitation for tomorrow’s
meal, together with the community of bhikkhus.” And by his silence the
Blessed One consented.

Sure,
then, of the Blessed One’s consent, Ambapali the courtesan rose from
her seat, respectfully saluted him, and keeping her right side towards
him, took her departure.

18. Then the Licchavi
of Vesali came to know: “The Blessed One, they say, has arrived at
Vesali and is now staying in Ambapali’s grove.” And they ordered a large
number of magnificent carriages to be made ready, each mounted one, and
accompanied by the rest, drove out from Vesali. Now, of these
Licchavis, some were in blue, with clothing and ornaments all of blue,
while others were in yellow, red, and white.

19.
And it so happened that Ambapali the courtesan drove up against the
young Licchavis, axle by axle, wheel by wheel, and yoke by yoke.
Thereupon the Licchavis exclaimed: “Why do you drive up against us in
this fashion, Ambapali?”

“Thus
it is, indeed, my princes, and not otherwise! For the Blessed One is
invited by me for tomorrow’s meal, together with the community of
bhikkhus!”

“Give up the meal, Ambapali, for a hundred thousand!”

But
she replied: “Even if you were to give me Vesali, sirs, together with
its tributary lands, I would not give up a meal of such importance.”

Then
the Licchavis snapped their fingers in annoyance: “See, friends! We are
defeated by this mango lass! We are utterly outdone by this mango
lass!” But they continued on their way to Ambapali’s grove.

20.
And the Blessed One beheld the Licchavis from afar, as they drove up.
Then he spoke to the bhikkhus, saying: “Those of you, bhikkhus, who have
not yet seen the Thirty-three gods, may behold the assembly of the
Licchavis, and may gaze on them, for they are comparable to the assembly
of the Thirty-three gods.”

21.
Then the Licchavis drove their carriages as far as the carriages could
go, then alighted; and approaching the Blessed One on foot, they
respectfully greeted him and sat down at one side. The Blessed One
instructed the Licchavis in the Dhamma, and roused, edified, and
gladdened them.

22.
Thereafter the Licchavis spoke to the Blessed One, saying: “May the
Blessed One, O Lord, please accept our invitation for tomorrow’s meal,
together with the community of bhikkhus.”

“The invitation for tomorrow’s meal, Licchavis, has been accepted by me from Ambapali the courtesan.”

Then
the Licchavis snapped their fingers in annoyance: “See, friends! We are
defeated by this mango lass! We are utterly outdone by this mango
lass!” And then the Licchavis, approving of the Blessed One’s words and
delighted with them, rose from their seats, respectfully saluted him,
and keeping their right sides towards him, took their departure.

23.
Then, after the night had passed, Ambapali the courtesan had choice
food, hard and soft, prepared in her park, and announced it to the
Blessed One: “It is time, O Lord; the meal is ready.” Thereupon the
Blessed One got ready in the forenoon, and taking bowl and robe, he went
together with the community of bhikkhus to Ambapali’s dwelling, and
there he took the seat prepared for him. And Ambapali herself attended
on the community of bhikkhus headed by the Buddha, and served them with
choice food, hard and soft.

24.
And when the Blessed One had finished his meal and had removed his hand
from his bowl, Ambapali the courtesan took a low seat, and placing
herself at one side, spoke to the Blessed One, saying: “This park, O
Lord, I offer to the community of bhikkhus headed by the Buddha.” And
the Blessed One accepted the park. He then instructed Ambapali in the
Dhamma, and having roused, edified, and gladdened her, he rose from his
seat and departed.

25.
And also at Vesali, in Ambapali’s grove, the Blessed One often gave
counsel to the bhikkhus thus: “Such and such is virtue; such and such is
concentration; and such and such is wisdom. Great becomes the fruit,
great is the gain of concentration when it is fully developed by
virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of wisdom
when it is fully developed by concentration; utterly freed from the
taints of lust, becoming, and ignorance is the mind that is fully
developed in wisdom.”

26.
When the Blessed One had stayed in Ambapali’s grove as long as he
pleased, he spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us
go to the village of Beluva.”

“So be it, Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode in the village of Beluva together with a large community of bhikkhus.

The Blessed One’s Deadly Sickness

27.
At that time the Blessed One spoke to the bhikkhus, saying: “Go now,
bhikkhus, and seek shelter anywhere in the neighborhood of Vesali where
you are welcome, among acquaintances and friends, and there spend the
rainy season. As for me, I shall spend the rainy season in this very
place, in the village of Beluva.”

“So be it, O Lord,” the bhikkhus said.

28.But when
the Blessed One had entered upon the rainy season, there arose in him a
severe illness, and sharp and deadly pains came upon him. And the
Blessed One endured them mindfully, clearly comprehending and
unperturbed.

29.
Then it occurred to the Blessed One: “It would not be fitting if I came
to my final passing away without addressing those who attended on me,
without taking leave of the community of bhikkhus. Then let me suppress
this illness by strength of will, resolve to maintain the life process,
and live on.”

30.
And the Blessed One suppressed the illness by strength of will,
resolved to maintain the life process, and lived on. So it came about
that the Blessed One’s illness was allayed.

31.
And the Blessed One recovered from that illness; and soon after his
recovery he came out from his dwelling place and sat down in the shade
of the building, on a seat prepared for him. Then the Venerable Ananda
approached the Blessed One, respectfully greeted him, and sitting down
at one side, he spoke to the Blessed One, saying: “Fortunate it is for
me, O Lord, to see the Blessed One at ease again! Fortunate it is for
me, O Lord, to see the Blessed One recovered! For truly, Lord, when I
saw the Blessed One’s sickness it was as though my own body became weak
as a creeper, every thing around became dim to me, and my senses failed
me. Yet, Lord, I still had some little comfort in the thought that the
Blessed One would not come to his final passing away until he had given
some last instructions respecting the community of bhikkhus.”

32.
Thus spoke the Venerable Ananda, but the Blessed One answered him,
saying: “What more does the community of bhikkhus expect from me,
Ananda? I have set forth the Dhamma without making any distinction of
esoteric and exoteric doctrine; there is nothing, Ananda, with regard to
the teachings that the Tathagata holds to the last with the closed fist
of a teacher who keeps some things back. Whosoever may think that it is
he who should lead the community of bhikkhus, or that the community
depends upon him, it is such a one that would have to give last
instructions respecting them. But, Ananda, the Tathagata has no such
idea as that it is he who should lead the community of bhikkhus, or that
the community depends upon him. So what instructions should he have to
give respecting the community of bhikkhus?

“Now
I am frail, Ananda, old, aged, far gone in years. This is my eightieth
year, and my life is spent. Even as an old cart, Ananda, is held
together with much difficulty, so the body of the Tathagata is kept
going only with supports. It is, Ananda, only when the Tathagata,
disregarding external objects, with the cessation of certain feelings,
attains to and abides in the signless concentration of mind, [19] that his body is more comfortable.

33. “Therefore,
Ananda, be islands unto yourselves, refuges unto yourselves, seeking no
external refuge; with the Dhamma as your island, the Dhamma as your
refuge, seeking no other refuge.

“And
how, Ananda, is a bhikkhu an island unto himself, a refuge unto
himself, seeking no external refuge; with the Dhamma as his island, the
Dhamma as his refuge, seeking no other refuge?

34.
“When he dwells contemplating the body in the body, earnestly, clearly
comprehending, and mindfully, after having overcome desire and sorrow in
regard to the world; when he dwells contemplating feelings in feelings,
the mind in the mind, and mental objects in mental objects, earnestly,
clearly comprehending, and mindfully, after having overcome desire and
sorrow in regard to the world, then, truly, he is an island unto
himself, a refuge unto himself, seeking no external refuge; having the
Dhamma as his island, the Dhamma as his refuge, seeking no other refuge.

35.
“Those bhikkhus of mine, Ananda, who now or after I am gone, abide as
an island unto themselves, as a refuge unto themselves, seeking no other
refuge; having the Dhamma as their island and refuge, seeking no other
refuge: it is they who will become the highest, [20] if they have the desire to learn.”

Part Three: Relinquishing the Will to Live

The Blessed One’s Prompting

1.
Then the Blessed One, getting ready in the forenoon, took bowl and robe
and went into Vesali for alms. After the alms round and meal, on his
return, he spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Take up a mat,
Ananda, and let us spend the day at the Capala shrine.”

“So be it, Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda took up a mat and followed behind the Blessed One, step by step.

2.
And the Blessed One went to the Capala shrine and sat down on the seat
prepared for him. And when the Venerable Ananda had seated himself at
one side after he had respectfully saluted the Blessed One, the Lord
said to him: “Pleasant, Ananda, is Vesali; pleasant are the shrines of Udena, Gotamaka, Sattambaka, Bahuputta, Sarandada, and Capala.”

3.
And the Blessed One said: “Whosoever, Ananda, has developed, practiced,
employed, strengthened, maintained, scrutinized, and brought to
perfection the four constituents of psychic power could, if he so
desired, remain throughout a world-period or until the end of it. [21]
The Tathagata, Ananda, has done so. Therefore the Tathagata could, if
he so desired, remain throughout a world-period or until the end of it.”

4.
But the Venerable Ananda was unable to grasp the plain suggestion, the
significant prompting, given by the Blessed One. As though his mind was
influenced by Mara, [22]
he did not beseech the Blessed One: “May the Blessed One remain, O
Lord!. May the Happy One remain, O Lord, throughout the world-period,
for the welfare and happiness of the multitude, out of compassion for
the world, for the benefit, well being, and happiness of gods and men!”

5. And when for a second and a third time the Blessed One repeated his words, the Venerable Ananda remained silent.

6. Then the Blessed One said to the Venerable Ananda: “Go now, Ananda, and do as seems fit to you.”

“Even
so, O Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda, rising from his seat,
respectfully saluted the Blessed One, and keeping his right side towards
him, took his seat under a tree some distance away.

Mara’s Appeal

7.And when
the Venerable Ananda had gone away, Mara, the Evil One, approached the
Blessed One. And standing at one side he spoke to the Blessed One,
saying: “Now, O Lord, let the Blessed One come to his final passing
away; let the Happy One utterly pass away! The time has come for the
Parinibbana of the Lord.

“For
the Blessed One, O Lord, spoke these words to me: ‘I shall not come to
my final passing away, Evil One, until my bhikkhus and bhikkhunis,
laymen and laywomen, have come to be true disciples — wise, well
disciplined, apt and learned, preservers of the Dhamma, living according
to the Dhamma, abiding by the appropriate conduct, and having learned
the Master’s word, are able to expound it, preach it, proclaim it,
establish it, reveal it, explain it in detail, and make it clear; until,
when adverse opinions arise, they shall be able to refute them
thoroughly and well, and to preach this convincing and liberating
Dhamma.’ [23]

8.
“And now, O Lord, bhikkhus and bhikkhunis, laymen and laywomen, have
become the Blessed One’s disciples in just this way. So, O Lord, let the
Blessed One come to his final passing away! The time has come for the
Parinibbana of the Lord.

“For
the Blessed One, O Lord, spoke these words to me: ‘I shall not come to
my final passing away, Evil One, until this holy life taught by me has
become successful, prosperous, far-renowned, popular, and widespread,
until it is well proclaimed among gods and men.’ And this too has come
to pass in just this way. So, O Lord, let the Blessed One come to his
final passing away, let the Happy One utterly pass away! The time has
come for the Parinibbana of the Lord.”

The Blessed One Relinquishes His Will to Live

9.
When this was said, the Blessed One spoke to Mara, the Evil One,
saying: “Do not trouble yourself, Evil One. Before long the Parinibbana
of the Tathagata will come about. Three months hence the Tathagata will
utterly pass away.”

10.
And at the Capala shrine the Blessed One thus mindfully and clearly
comprehending renounced his will to live on. And upon the Lord’s
renouncing his will to live on, there came a tremendous earthquake,
dreadful and astonishing, and thunder rolled across the heavens. And the
Blessed One beheld it with understanding, and made this solemn
utterance:

11.
Then it came to the mind of the Venerable Ananda: “Marvellous it is
indeed, and most wonderful! The earth shakes mightily, tremendously!
Dreadful and astonishing it is, how the thunders roll across the
heavens! What could be the reason, what the cause, that so mighty an
earthquake should arise?”

12.
And the Venerable Ananda approached the Blessed One, and respectfully
greeting him, sat down at one side. Then he spoke to the Blessed One,
saying: “Marvellous it is indeed, and most wonderful! The earth shakes
mightily, tremendously! Dreadful and astonishing it is how the thunders
roll across the heavens! What could be the reason, what the cause, that
so mighty an earthquake should arise?”

13.
Then the Blessed One said: “There are eight reasons, Ananda, eight
causes for a mighty earthquake to arise. What are those eight?

14.
“This great earth, Ananda, is established upon liquid, the liquid upon
the atmosphere, and the atmosphere upon space. And when, Ananda, mighty
atmospheric disturbances take place, the liquid is agitated. And with
the agitation of the liquid, tremors of the earth arise. This is the
first reason, the first cause for the arising of mighty earthquakes.

15.
“Again, Ananda, when an ascetic or holy man of great power, one who has
gained mastery of his mind, or a deity who is mighty and potent,
develops intense concentration on the delimited aspect of the earth
element, and to a boundless degree on the liquid element, he, too,
causes the earth to tremble, quiver, and shake. This is the second
reason, the second cause for the arising of mighty earthquakes.

16-21.
“Again, Ananda, when the Bodhisatta departs from the Tusita realm and
descends into his mother’s womb, mindfully and clearly comprehending;
and when the Bodhisatta comes out from his mother’s womb, mindfully and
clearly comprehending; and when the Tathagata becomes fully enlightened
in unsurpassed, supreme Enlightenment; when the Tathagata sets rolling
the excellent Wheel of the Dhamma; when the Tathagata renounces his will
to live on; and when the Tathagata comes to pass away into the state of
Nibbana in which no element of clinging remains — then, too, Ananda,
this great earth trembles, quivers, and shakes.

“These, Ananda, are the eight reasons, the eight causes for a great earthquake to arise. [27]

22.
“Now there are eight kinds of assemblies, Ananda, that is to say,
assemblies of nobles, brahmans, householders, ascetics, of the Four
Great Kings, of the Thirty-three gods, of Maras, and of Brahmas.

23. “And I recall, Ananda, how I have attended each of these eight kinds of assemblies, amounting to hundreds. [28]
And before seating myself and starting the conversation or the
discussion, I made my appearance resemble theirs, my voice resemble
theirs. And so I taught them the Dhamma, and roused, edified, and
gladdened them. Yet while I was speaking to them thus, they did not know
me, and they would enquire of one another, asking: ‘Who is he that
speaks to us? Is it a man or a god?’

“Then
having taught them the Dhamma, and roused, edified, and gladdened them,
I would straightaway vanish. And when I had vanished, too, they did not
know me, and they would enquire of one another, asking: ‘Who is he that
has vanished? Is it a man or a god?’

24. “Now there are eight fields of mastery, [29] Ananda. What are those eight?

25. “When one, perceiving forms subjectively, [30] sees small forms, beautiful or ugly, external to himself, [31] and mastering them, is aware that he perceives and knows them as they are — this is the first field of mastery.

26.
“When one, perceiving forms subjectively, sees large forms, beautiful
or ugly, external to himself, and mastering them, is aware that he
perceives and knows them as they are — this is the second field of
mastery.

27. “When one, not perceiving forms subjectively, [32]
sees small forms, beautiful or ugly, external to himself, and mastering
them, is aware that he perceives and knows them as they are — this is
the third field of mastery.

28.
“When one, not perceiving forms subjectively, sees large forms,
beautiful or ugly, external to himself, and mastering them, is aware
that he perceives and knows them as they are — this is the fourth field
of mastery.

29.
“When one, not perceiving forms subjectively, sees forms external to
himself that are blue, blue in color, of a blue luster like the blossoms
of flax, or like fine Benares muslin which, burnished on both sides, is
blue, blue in color, of a blue luster — when such a one sees forms
external to himself that are blue, and mastering them, is aware that he
perceives and knows them as they are — this is the fifth field of
mastery.

30.
“When one, not perceiving forms subjectively, sees forms external to
himself that are yellow, yellow in color, of a yellow luster like the
Kanikara blossom, or like fine Benares muslin which, burnished on both
sides, is yellow, yellow in color, of a yellow luster — when such a one
sees forms external to himself that are yellow, and mastering them, is
aware that he perceives and knows them as they are — this is the sixth
field of mastery.

31.
“When one, not perceiving forms subjectively, sees forms external to
himself that are red, red in color, of a red luster like the
Bandhujivaka blossom, or like fine Benares muslin which, burnished on
both sides, is red, red in color, of a red luster — when such a one sees
forms external to himself that are red, and mastering them, is aware
that he perceives and knows them as they are — this is the seventh field
of mastery.

32.
“When one, not perceiving forms subjectively, sees forms external to
himself that are white, white in color, of a white luster like the
morning star, or like fine Benares muslin which, burnished on both
sides, is white, white in color, of a white luster — when such a one
sees forms external to himself that are white, and mastering them, is
aware that he perceives and knows them as they are — this is the eighth
field of mastery.

33. “Now there are eight liberations, Ananda. What are those eight? [33]

34. “Oneself having form, [34] one perceives forms; this is the first liberation.

35. “Being unaware of one’s own form, one perceives forms external to oneself; this is the second liberation.

36. “Experiencing loveliness, one is intent upon it; [35] this is the third liberation.

37.
“By utterly transcending the perceptions of matter, by the
disappearance of the perceptions of sense-reaction, and by giving no
attention to diversity-perceptions, one becomes aware of, attains to,
and abides in the sphere of infinite space; this is the fourth
liberation.

38.
“By utterly transcending the sphere of infinite space, one becomes
aware of, attains to, and abides in the sphere of infinite
consciousness; this is the fifth liberation.

39.
“By utterly transcending the sphere of infinite consciousness, one
becomes aware of, attains to, and abides in the sphere of nothingness;
this is the sixth liberation.

40.
“By utterly transcending the sphere of nothingness, one attains to and
abides in the sphere of neither-perception-nor-non-perception; this is
the seventh liberation.

41.
“By utterly transcending the sphere of
neither-perception-nor-non-perception, one attains to and abides in the
cessation of perception and sensation; this is the eighth liberation.

“These, Ananda, are the eight liberations.

Mara’s Former Temptation

42.
“There was a time, Ananda, when I dwelt at Uruvela, on the bank of the
Nerañjara River, at the foot of the goatherds’ banyan-tree, soon after
my supreme Enlightenment. And Mara, the Evil One, approached me, saying:
‘Now, O Lord, let the Blessed One come to his final passing away! Let
the Happy One utterly pass away! The time has come for the Parinibbana
of the Lord.’

43.
“Then, Ananda, I answered Mara, the Evil One, saying: ‘I shall not come
to my final passing away, Evil One, until my bhikkhus and bhikkhunis,
laymen and laywomen, have come to be true disciples — wise, well
disciplined, apt and learned, preservers of the Dhamma, living according
to the Dhamma, abiding by appropriate conduct and, having learned the
Master’s word, are able to expound it, preach it, proclaim it, establish
it, reveal it, explain it in detail, and make it clear; until, when
adverse opinions arise, they shall be able to refute them thoroughly and
well, and to preach this convincing and liberating Dhamma.

44.
“‘I shall not come to my final passing away, Evil One, until this holy
life taught by me has become successful, prosperous, far-renowned,
popular, and widespread, until it is well proclaimed among gods and
men.’

45.
“And again today, Ananda, at the Capala shrine, Mara, the Evil One,
approached me, saying: ‘Now, O Lord, bhikkhus and bhikkhunis, laymen and
laywomen, have come to be true disciples of the Blessed One — wise,
well disciplined, apt and learned, preservers of the Dhamma, living
according to the Dhamma, abiding in the appropriate conduct, and having
learned the Master’s word, are able to expound it, preach it, proclaim
it, establish it, reveal it, explain it in detail, and make it clear;
and when adverse opinions arise, they are now able to refute them
thoroughly and well, and to preach this convincing and liberating
Dhamma.

“‘And
now, O Lord, this holy life taught by the Blessed One has become
successful, prosperous, far-renowned, popular and widespread, and it is
well proclaimed among gods and men. Therefore, O Lord, let the Blessed
One come to his final passing away! Let the Happy One utterly pass away!
The time has come for the Parinibbana of the Lord.’

46.
“And then, Ananda, I answered Mara, the Evil One, saying: ‘Do not
trouble yourself, Evil One. Before long the Parinibbana of the Tathagata
will come about. Three months hence the Tathagata will utterly pass
away.’

47. “And in this way, Ananda, today at the Capala shrine the Tathagata has renounced his will to live on.”

Ananda’s Appeal

48.
At these words the Venerable Ananda spoke to the Blessed One, saying:
“May the Blessed One remain, O Lord! May the Happy One remain, O Lord,
throughout the world-period, for the welfare and happiness of the
multitude, out of compassion for the world, for the benefit, well being,
and happiness of gods and men!”

49.
And the Blessed One answered, saying: “Enough, Ananda. Do not entreat
the Tathagata, for the time is past, Ananda, for such an entreaty.”

50-51.
But for a second and a third time, the Venerable Ananda said to the
Blessed One: “May the Blessed One remain, O Lord! May the Happy One
remain, O Lord, throughout the world-period, for the welfare and
happiness of the multitude, out of compassion for the world, for the
benefit, well being, and happiness of gods and men!”

52.
Then the Blessed One said: “Do you have faith, Ananda, in the
Enlightenment of the Tathagata?” And the Venerable Ananda replied: “Yes,
O Lord, I do.”

“Then how, Ananda, can you persist against the Tathagata even up to the third time?”

53.
Then the Venerable Ananda said: “This, O Lord, I have heard and learned
from the Blessed One himself when the Blessed One said to me:
‘Whosoever, Ananda, has developed, practiced, employed, strengthened,
maintained, scrutinized, and brought to perfection the four constituents
of psychic power could, if he so desired, remain throughout a
world-period or until the end of it. The Tathagata, Ananda, has done so.
Therefore the Tathagata could, if he so desired, remain throughout a
world-period or until the end of it.’”

“Then,
Ananda, the fault is yours. Herein have you failed, inasmuch as you
were unable to grasp the plain suggestion, the significant prompting
given by the Tathagata, and you did not then entreat the Tathagata to
remain. For if you had done so, Ananda, twice the Tathagata might have
declined, but the third time he would have consented. Therefore, Ananda,
the fault is yours; herein have you failed.

55.
“At Rajagaha, Ananda, when dwelling at Vultures’ Peak, I spoke to you,
saying: ‘Pleasant, Ananda, is Rajagaha; pleasant is Vultures’ Peak.
Whosoever, Ananda, has developed… Therefore the Tathagata could, if he
so desired, remain throughout a world-period or until the end of it.’

56. “So also at the Banyan Grove, at Robbers’ Cliff, at the Sattapanni Cave on the Vebhara Mountain, at the Black Rock of Isigili, at the Serpents’ Pool in the Cool Forest, at the Tapoda
Grove, at the Bamboo Grove in the Squirrels’ Feeding-ground, at
Jivaka’s Mango Grove, and at Small Nook in the Deer Park I spoke to you
in the same words, saying: ‘Pleasant, Ananda, is Rajagaha, pleasant are
these places. Whosoever, Ananda, has developed… Therefore the
Tathagata could, if he so desired, remain throughout a world-period or
until the end of it.’

“But
you, Ananda, were unable to grasp the plain suggestion, the significant
prompting given you by the Tathagata, and you did not entreat the
Tathagata to remain. For if you had done so, Ananda, twice the Tathagata
might have declined, but the third time he would have consented.
Therefore, Ananda, the fault is yours; herein you have failed.

57.
“So also at Vesali, Ananda, at different times the Tathagata has spoken
to you, saying: ‘Pleasant, Ananda, is Vesali; pleasant are the shrines
of Udena, Gotamaka, Sattambaka, Bahuputta, Sarandada, and Capala.
Whosoever, Ananda, has developed… Therefore the Tathagata could, if he
so desired, remain throughout a world-period or until the end of it.’

“But
you, Ananda, were unable to grasp the plain suggestion, the significant
prompting, given you by the Tathagata, and you did not entreat the
Tathagata to remain. For if you had done so, Ananda, twice the Tathagata
might have declined, but the third time he would have consented.
Therefore, Ananda, the fault is yours; herein you have failed.

58.
“Yet, Ananda, have I not taught from the very beginning that with all
that is dear and beloved there must be change, separation, and
severance? Of that which is born, come into being, is compounded and
subject to decay, how can one say: ‘May it not come to dissolution!’
There can be no such state of things. And of that, Ananda, which the
Tathagata has finished with, that which he has relinquished, given up,
abandoned, and rejected — his will to live on — the Tathagata’s word has
been spoken once for all: ‘Before long the Parinibbana of the Tathagata
will come about. Three months hence the Tathagata will utterly pass
away.’ And that the Tathagata should withdraw his words for the sake of
living on — this is an impossibility.

The Last Admonition

59.
“So, then, Ananda, let us go to the hall of the Gabled House, in the
Great Forest.” And the Venerable Ananda replied: “So be it, Lord.”

60.
Then the Blessed One, with the Venerable Ananda, went to the hall of
the Gabled House, in the Great Forest. And there he spoke to the
Venerable Ananda, saying: “Go now, Ananda, and assemble in the hall of
audience all the bhikkhus who dwell in the neighborhood of Vesali.”

“So
be it, Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda gathered all the bhikkhus who
dwelt in the neighborhood of Vesali, and assembled them in the hall of
audience. And then, respectfully saluting the Blessed One, and standing
at one side, he said: “The community of bhikkhus is assembled, Lord. Now
let the Blessed One do as he wishes.”

61.
Thereupon the Blessed One entered the hall of audience, and taking the
seat prepared for him, he exhorted the bhikkhus, saying: “Now, O
bhikkhus, I say to you that these teachings of which I have direct
knowledge and which I have made known to you — these you should
thoroughly learn, cultivate, develop, and frequently practice, that the
life of purity may be established and may long endure, for the welfare
and happiness of the multitude, out of compassion for the world, for the
benefit, well being, and happiness of gods and men.

62.
“And what, bhikkhus, are these teachings? They are the four foundations
of mindfulness, the four right efforts, the four constituents of
psychic power, the five faculties, the five powers, the seven factors of
enlightenment, and the Noble Eightfold Path. These, bhikkhus, are the
teachings of which I have direct knowledge, which I have made known to
you, and which you should thoroughly learn, cultivate, develop, and
frequently practice, that the life of purity may be established and may
long endure, for the welfare and happiness of the multitude, out of
compassion for the world, for the benefit, well being, and happiness of
gods and men.”

63.
Then the Blessed One said to the bhikkhus: “So, bhikkhus, I exhort you:
All compounded things are subject to vanish. Strive with earnestness.
The time of the Tathagata’s Parinibbana is near. Three months hence the
Tathagata will utterly pass away.”

64. And having spoken these words, the Happy One, the Master, spoke again, saying:

My years are now full ripe, the life span left is short.

Departing, I go hence from you, relying on myself alone.

Be earnest, then, O bhikkhus, be mindful and of virtue pure!

With firm resolve, guard your own mind!

Whoso untiringly pursues the Dhamma and the Discipline

Shall go beyond the round of births and make an end of suffering.

Part Four: The Last Meal

The Elephant’s Look

1.
Then the Blessed One, getting ready in the forenoon, took bowl and robe
and went into Vesali for alms. After the alms round and meal, on his
return, he looked upon Vesali with the elephant’s look, [36]
and said to the Venerable Ananda: “This, Ananda, is the last time that
the Tathagata will look upon Vesali. Come, Ananda, let us go to Bhandagama.”

“So be it, O Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode at Bhandagama together with a large community of bhikkhus.

2.
And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Bhikkhus, it is
through not realizing, through not penetrating four principles that this
long course of birth and death has been passed through and undergone by
me as well as by you. What are those four? They are: noble virtue,
noble concentration, noble wisdom, and noble emancipation. But now,
bhikkhus, that these have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the
craving for existence, destroyed is that which leads to renewed
becoming, and there is no fresh becoming.”

3. And having spoken these words, the Happy One, the Master, spoke again, saying:

“Virtue, concentration, wisdom, and emancipation unsurpassed —

These are the principles realized by Gotama the renowned;

And, knowing them, he, the Buddha, to his monks has taught the Dhamma.

He, the destroyer of suffering, the Master, the Seer, is at peace.”

4.
And also at Bhandagama the Blessed One often gave counsel to the
bhikkhus thus: “Such and such is virtue; such and such is concentration;
and such and such is wisdom. Great becomes the fruit, great is the gain
of concentration when it is fully developed by virtuous conduct; great
becomes the fruit, great is the gain of wisdom when it is fully
developed by concentration; utterly freed from the taints of lust,
becoming, and ignorance is the mind that is fully developed in wisdom.”

5.
When the Blessed One had stayed at Bhandagama as long as he pleased, he
spoke to the Venerable Ananda: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Hatthigama.”

“So be it, Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode at Hatthigama together with a large community of bhikkhus.

And
when the Blessed One had stayed at Hatthigama as long as he pleased, he
took up his abode at Ambagama, then at Jambugama. And at each of these
places the Blessed One often gave counsel to the bhikkhus thus: “Such
and such is virtue; such and such is concentration; and such and such is
wisdom. Great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of concentration
when it is fully developed by virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit,
great is the gain of wisdom when it is fully developed by
concentration; utterly freed from the taints of lust, becoming, and
ignorance is the mind that is fully developed in wisdom.”

6.
And when the Blessed One had stayed at Jambugama as long as he pleased,
he spoke to the Venerable Ananda: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Bhoganagara.”

“So
be it, Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode at Bhoganagara
together with a large community of bhikkhus, and stayed in the Ananda
shrine.

7. And there the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Now, bhikkhus, I shall make known to you the four great references. [37] Listen and pay heed to my words.” And those bhikkhus answered, saying:

“So be it, Lord.”

8-11.
Then the Blessed One said: “In this fashion, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu might
speak: ‘Face to face with the Blessed One, brethren, I have heard and
learned thus: This is the Dhamma and the Discipline, the Master’s
Dispensation’; or: ‘In an abode of such and such a name lives a
community with elders and a chief. Face to face with that community, I
have heard and learned thus: This is the Dhamma and the Discipline, the
Master’s Dispensation’; or: ‘In an abode of such and such a name live
several bhikkhus who are elders, who are learned, who have accomplished
their course, who are preservers of the Dhamma, the Discipline, and the
Summaries. Face to face with those elders, I have heard and learned
thus: This is the Dhamma and the Discipline, the Master’s Dispensation’;
or: ‘In an abode of such and such a name lives a single bhikkhu who is
an elder, who is learned, who has accomplished his course, who is a
preserver of the Dhamma, the Discipline, and the Summaries. Face to face
with that elder, I have heard and learned thus: This is the Dhamma and
the Discipline, the Master’s Dispensation.’

“In
such a case, bhikkhus, the declaration of such a bhikkhu is neither to
be received with approval nor with scorn. Without approval and without
scorn, but carefully studying the sentences word by word, one should
trace them in the Discourses and verify them by the Discipline. If they
are neither traceable in the Discourses nor verifiable by the
Discipline, one must conclude thus: ‘Certainly, this is not the Blessed
One’s utterance; this has been misunderstood by that bhikkhu — or by
that community, or by those elders, or by that elder.’ In that way,
bhikkhus, you should reject it. But if the sentences concerned are
traceable in the Discourses and verifiable by the Discipline, then one
must conclude thus: ‘Certainly, this is the Blessed One’s utterance;
this has been well understood by that bhikkhu — or by that community, or
by those elders, or by that elder.’ And in that way, bhikkhus, you may
accept it on the first, second, third, or fourth reference. These,
bhikkhus, are the four great references for you to preserve.”

12.
And also at Bhoganagara, at the Ananda shrine, the Blessed One often
gave counsel to the bhikkhus thus: “Such and such is virtue; such and
such is concentration; and such and such is wisdom. Great becomes the
fruit, great is the gain of concentration when it is fully developed by
virtuous conduct; great becomes the fruit, great is the gain of wisdom
when it is fully developed by concentration; utterly freed from the
taints of lust, becoming, and ignorance is the mind that is fully
developed in wisdom.”

13.
When the Blessed One had stayed at Bhoganagara as long as he pleased,
he spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Pava.”

“So
be it, Lord.” And the Blessed One took up his abode at Pava together
with a great community of bhikkhus, and stayed in the Mango Grove of
Cunda, who was by family a metalworker.

The Buddha’s Last Meal

14. And Cunda
the metalworker came to know: “The Blessed One, they say, has arrived
at Pava, and is staying in my Mango Grove.” And he went to the Blessed
One, and having respectfully greeted him, sat down at one side. And the
Blessed One instructed Cunda the metalworker in the Dhamma, and roused,
edified, and gladdened him.

15.
Then Cunda spoke to the Blessed One, saying: “May the Blessed One, O
Lord, please accept my invitation for tomorrow’s meal, together with the
community of bhikkhus.” And by his silence the Blessed One consented.

16.
Sure, then, of the Blessed One’s consent, Cunda the metalworker rose
from his seat, respectfully saluted the Blessed One, and keeping his
right side towards him, took his departure.

17.
And Cunda the metalworker, after the night had passed, had choice food,
hard and soft, prepared in his abode, together with a quantity of sukara-maddava,[38] and announced it to the Blessed One, saying: “It is time, O Lord, the meal is ready.”

18.
Thereupon the Blessed One, in the forenoon, having got ready, took bowl
and robe and went with the community of bhikkhus to the house of Cunda,
and there sat down on the seat prepared for him. And he spoke to Cunda,
saying: “With the sukara-maddava you have prepared, Cunda, you may serve me; with the other food, hard and soft, you may serve the community of bhikkhus.”

“So be it, Lord.” And with the sukara-maddava prepared by him, he served the Blessed One; and with the other food, hard and soft, he served the community of bhikkhus.

19. Thereafter the Blessed One spoke to Cunda, saying: “Whatever, Cunda, is left over of the sukara-maddava,
bury that in a pit. For I do not see in all this world, with its gods,
Maras, and Brahmas, among the host of ascetics and brahmans, gods and
men, anyone who could eat it and entirely digest it except the Tathagata
alone.”

And Cunda the metalworker answered the Blessed One saying: “So be it, O Lord.”And what remained over of the sukara-maddava he buried in a pit.

20.
Then he returned to the Blessed One, respectfully greeted him, and sat
down at one side. And the Blessed One instructed Cunda the metalworker
in the Dhamma, and roused, edified, and gladdened him. After this he
rose from his seat and departed.

21.
And soon after the Blessed One had eaten the meal provided by Cunda the
metalworker, a dire sickness fell upon him, even dysentery, and he
suffered sharp and deadly pains. But the Blessed One endured them
mindfully, clearly comprehending and unperturbed.

22. Then the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us go to Kusinara.” And the Venerable Ananda answered: “So be it, Lord.”

The Clearing of the Waters

Buddhist Chants & Peace Music - Hanshan
Temple

24.
Now on the way the Blessed One went aside from the highway and stopped
at the foot of a tree. And he said to the Venerable Ananda: “Please fold
my upper robe in four, Ananda, and lay it down. I am weary and want to
rest awhile.”

“So be it, Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda folded the robe in four and laid it down.

25.
And the Blessed One sat down on the seat prepared for him and said to
the Venerable Ananda: “Please bring me some water, Ananda. I am thirsty
and want to drink.”

26.
And the Venerable Ananda answered the Blessed One: “But just now, Lord,
a great number of carts, five hundred carts, have passed over, and the
shallow water has been cut through by the wheels, so that it flows
turbid and muddy. But the Kakuttha River, Lord, is quite close by, and
its waters are clear, pleasant, cool, and translucent. It is easily
approachable and delightfully placed. There the Blessed One can quench
his thirst and refresh his limbs.”

27-29.
But a second time the Blessed One made his request, and the Venerable
Ananda answered him as before. And then for a third time the Blessed One
said: “Please bring me some water, Ananda. I am thirsty and want to
drink.”

30.
Then the Venerable Ananda answered, saying: “So be it, Lord.” And he
took the bowl and went to the stream. And the shallow water, which had
been cut through by the wheels so that it flowed turbid and muddy,
became clear and settled down, pure and pleasant as the Venerable Ananda
drew near.

31. Then the Venerable Ananda thought: “Marvellous and most wonderful indeed is the power and glory of the Tathagata!”

32.
And he took up water in the bowl and carried it to the Blessed One, and
said: “Marvellous and most wonderful indeed is the power and glory of
the Tathagata! For this shallow water, which had been cut through by the
wheels so that it flowed turbid and muddy, became clear and settled
down, pure and pleasant as I drew near. Now let the Blessed One drink
the water. Let the Happy One drink.” And the Blessed One drank the
water.

Pukkusa the Malla

34.
And when he saw the Blessed One seated at the foot of a tree, he
approached him, respectfully greeted him, and sat down at one side. And
he spoke to the Blessed One, saying: “Marvellous it is, Lord, most
wonderful it is, O Lord, the state of calmness wherein abide those who
have gone forth from the world.

35.
“For at one time, Lord, Alara Kalama was on a journey, and he went
aside from the highway and sat down by the wayside at the foot of a tree
to pass the heat of the day. And it came about, Lord, that a great
number of carts, even five hundred carts, passed by him, one by one. And
then, Lord, a certain man who was following behind that train of carts,
approached and spoke to him, saying: ‘Did you, sir, see a great number
of carts that passed you by?’ And Alara Kalama answered him: ‘I did not
see them, brother.’ ‘But the noise, sir, surely you heard?’ ‘I did not
hear it, brother.’ Then that man asked him: ‘Then, sir, perhaps you
slept?’ ‘No, brother, I was not sleeping.’ ‘Then, sir, were you
conscious?’ ‘I was, brother.’ Then that man said: ‘Then, sir, while
conscious and awake you still did not see the great number of carts,
even five hundred carts, that passed you by one after another, nor heard
the noise? Why, sir, your very robe is covered with their dust!’ And
Alara Kalama replied, saying: ‘So it is, brother.’

36.
“And to that man, O Lord, came the thought: ‘Marvellous it is, most
wonderful indeed it is, the state of calmness wherein abide those who
have gone forth from the world!’ And there arose in him great faith in
Alara Kalama, and he went his way.”

37.
“Now what do you think, Pukkusa? What is more difficult to do, more
difficult to meet with — that a man, while conscious and awake, should
not see a great number of carts, even five hundred carts, that passed
him by one after another, nor hear the noise, or that one conscious and
awake, in the midst of a heavy rain, with thunder rolling, lightning
flashing, and thunderbolts crashing, should neither see it nor hear the
noise?”

38.
“What, O Lord, are five hundred carts — nay, six, seven, eight, nine
hundred, or a thousand or even hundreds of thousands of carts — compared
with this?”

39.
“Now one time, Pukkusa, I was staying at Atuma, and had my abode in a
barn there. And at that time there was a heavy rain, with thunder
rolling, lightning flashing, and thunderbolts crashing. And two farmers
who were brothers were killed close to the barn, together with four
oxen, and a great crowd came forth from Atuma to the spot where they
were killed.

40.
“Now at that time, Pukkusa, I had come out of the barn and was walking
up and down in thought before the door. And a certain man from the great
crowd approached me, respectfully greeted me, and stood at one side.

41.
“And I asked him: ‘Why, brother, has this great crowd gathered
together?’ And he answered me: ‘Just now, Lord, there was a heavy rain,
with thunder rolling, lightning flashing, and thunderbolts crashing. And
two farmers who were brothers were killed close by, together with four
oxen. It is because of this that the great crowd has gathered. But
where, Lord, were you?’

“‘I
was here, brother.’ ‘Yet, Lord, did you not see it?’ ‘I did not see it,
brother.’ ‘But the noise, Lord, you surely heard?’ ‘I did not hear it,
brother.’ Then that man asked me: ‘Then, Lord, perhaps you slept?’ ‘No,
brother, I was not sleeping.’ ‘Then, Lord, you were conscious?’ ‘I was,
brother.’ Then that man said: ‘Then, Lord, while conscious and awake, in
the midst of a heavy rain, with thunder rolling, lightning flashing,
and thunderbolts crashing, you neither saw it nor heard the noise?’ And I
answered him, saying: ‘I did not, brother.’

42.
“And to that man, Pukkusa, came the thought: ‘Marvellous it is, most
wonderful indeed it is, the state of calmness wherein abide those who
have gone forth from the world!’ And there arose in him great faith in
me, and he respectfully saluted me, and keeping his right side towards
me, he went his way.”

43.
When this had been said, Pukkusa of the Malla clan said to the Blessed
One: “The faith, Lord, that I had in Alara Kalama I now scatter to the
mighty wind, I let it be carried away as by a flowing stream! Excellent,
O Lord, most excellent, O Lord! It is as if, Lord, one were to set
upright what had been overthrown, or to reveal what had been hidden, or
to show the path to one who had gone astray, or to light a lamp in the
darkness so that those having eyes might see — even so has the Blessed
One set forth the Dhamma in many ways. And so, O Lord, I take my refuge
in the Blessed One, the Dhamma, and the Community of Bhikkhus. May the
Blessed One accept me as his disciple, one who has taken refuge until
the end of life.”

44.
Then Pukkusa of the Malla clan spoke to a certain man, saying: “Bring
me at once, friend, two sets of golden-hued robes, burnished and ready
for wear.” And the man answered him: “So be it, sir.”

45.
And when the robes were brought, Pukkusa of the Malla clan offered them
to the Blessed One, saying: “May the Blessed One, O Lord, out of
compassion, accept this from me.” And the Blessed One said: “Robe me,
then in one, Pukkusa, and in the other robe Ananda.”

“So be it, Lord.” And he thereupon robed the Blessed One in one, and in the other he robed the Venerable Ananda.

46.
And then the Blessed One instructed Pukkusa of the Malla clan in the
Dhamma, and roused, edified, and gladdened him. And after that, Pukkusa
rose from his seat, respectfully saluted the Blessed One, and keeping
his right side towards him, went his way.

47.
And soon after Pukkusa of the Malla clan had departed, the Venerable
Ananda arranged the set of golden-hued robes, burnished and ready for
wear, about the body of the Blessed One. But when the set of robes was
arranged upon the body of the Blessed One, it became as though faded,
and its splendor dimmed.

48.
And the Venerable Ananda said to the Blessed One: “Marvellous it is, O
Lord, most wonderful indeed it is, how clear and radiant the skin of the
Tathagata appears! This set of golden-hued robes, burnished and ready
for wear, Lord, now that it is arranged upon the body of the Blessed One
seems to have become faded, its splendor dimmed.”

49.
“It is so, Ananda. There are two occasions, Ananda, when the skin of
the Tathagata appears exceedingly clear and radiant. Which are these
two? The night, Ananda, when the Tathagata becomes fully enlightened in
unsurpassed, supreme Enlightenment, and the night when the Tathagata
comes to his final passing away into the state of Nibbana in which no
element of clinging remains. These, Ananda, are the two occasions on
which the skin of the Tathagata appears exceedingly clear and radiant.

50.
“And now today, in the last watch of this very night, Ananda, in the
Mallas’ Sala Grove, in the vicinity of Kusinara, between two sala trees,
the Tathagata will come to his Parinibbana. So now, Ananda, let us go
to the Kakuttha River.”

At the Kakuttha River

52. Then the Blessed One went to the Kakuttha River together with a great community of bhikkhus.

53.
And he went down into the water and bathed and drank. And coming forth
from the water again, he went to the Mango Grove, and there spoke to theVenerable Cundaka, saying: “Please fold my upper robe in four, Cundaka, and lay it down. I am weary and would rest awhile.”

“So be it, Lord.” And Cundaka folded the robe in four and laid it down.

54.
And the Blessed One lay down on his right side, in the lion’s posture,
resting one foot upon the other, and so disposed himself, mindfully and
clearly comprehending, with the time for rising held in mind. And the
Venerable Cundaka sat down right in front of the Blessed One.

Relieving Cunda’s Remorse

56.
Then the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “It may
come to pass, Ananda, that someone will cause remorse to Cunda the
metalworker, saying: ‘It is no gain to you, friend Cunda, but a loss,
that it was from you the Tathagata took his last alms meal, and then
came to his end.’ Then, Ananda, the remorse of Cunda should be dispelled
after this manner: ‘It is a gain to you, friend Cunda, a blessing that
the Tathagata took his last alms meal from you, and then came to his
end. For, friend, face to face with the Blessed One I have heard and
learned: “There are two offerings of food which are of equal fruition,
of equal outcome, exceeding in grandeur the fruition and result of any
other offerings of food. Which two? The one partaken of by the Tathagata
before becoming fully enlightened in unsurpassed, supreme
Enlightenment; and the one partaken of by the Tathagata before passing
into the state of Nibbana in which no element of clinging remains. By
his deed the worthy Cunda has accumulated merit which makes for long
life, beauty, well being, glory, heavenly rebirth, and sovereignty.”‘
Thus, Ananda, the remorse of Cunda the metalworker should be dispelled.”

57. Then the Blessed One, understanding that matter, breathed forth the solemn utterance:

Who gives, his virtues shall increase;

Who is self-curbed, no hatred bears;

Whoso is skilled in virtue, evil shuns,

And by the rooting out of lust and hate

And all delusion, comes to be at peace.

Part Five: At Kusinara

Last Place of Rest

t .

1. Then the Blessed One addressed the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Come, Ananda, let us cross to the farther bank of the Hiraññavati, and go to the Mallas’ Sala Grove, in the vicinity of Kusinara.”

“So be it, Lord.”

2.
And the Blessed One, together with a large company of bhikkhus, went to
the further bank of the river Hiraññavati, to the Sala Grove of the
Mallas, in the vicinity of Kusinara. And there he spoke to the Venerable
Ananda, saying:

3.
“Please, Ananda, prepare for me a couch between the twin sala trees,
with the head to the north. I am weary, Ananda, and want to lie down.”[41]

“So be it, Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda did as the Blessed One asked him to do.

Then
the Blessed One lay down on his right side, in the lion’s posture,
resting one foot upon the other, and so disposed himself, mindfully and
clearly comprehending.

4.
At that time the twin sala trees broke out in full bloom, though it was
not the season of flowering. And the blossoms rained upon the body of
the Tathagata and dropped and scattered and were strewn upon it in
worship of the Tathagata. And celestial mandarava flowers and
heavenly sandalwood powder from the sky rained down upon the body of the
Tathagata, and dropped and scattered and were strewn upon it in worship
of the Tathagata. And the sound of heavenly voices and heavenly
instruments made music in the air out of reverence for the Tathagata.

5.
And the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Ananda, the
twin sala trees are in full bloom, though it is not the season of
flowering. And the blossoms rain upon the body of the Tathagata and drop
and scatter and are strewn upon it in worship of the Tathagata. And
celestial coral flowers and heavenly sandalwood powder from the sky rain
down upon the body of the Tathagata, and drop and scatter and are
strewn upon it in worship of the Tathagata. And the sound of heavenly
voices and heavenly instruments makes music in the air out of reverence
for the Tathagata.

6.
“Yet it is not thus, Ananda, that the Tathagata is respected,
venerated, esteemed, worshipped, and honored in the highest degree. But,
Ananda, whatever bhikkhu or bhikkhuni, layman or laywoman, abides by
the Dhamma, lives uprightly in the Dhamma, walks in the way of the
Dhamma, it is by such a one that the Tathagata is respected, venerated,
esteemed, worshipped, and honored in the highest degree. Therefore,
Ananda, thus should you train yourselves: ‘We shall abide by the Dhamma,
live uprightly in the Dhamma, walk in the way of the Dhamma.’”

The Grief of the Gods

7. At that time the Venerable Upavana
was standing before the Blessed One, fanning him. And the Blessed One
rebuked him, saying: “Move aside, bhikkhu, do not stand in front of me.”

8.
And to the Venerable Ananda came the thought: “This Venerable Upavana
has been in attendance on the Blessed One for a long time, closely
associating with him and serving him. Yet now, right at the end, the
Blessed One rebukes him. What now could be the reason, what the cause
for the Blessed One to rebuke the Venerable Upavana, saying: ‘Move
aside, bhikkhu, do not stand in front of me’?”

9-10.
And the Venerable Ananda told his thought to the Blessed One. The
Blessed One said: “Throughout the tenfold world-system, Ananda, there
are hardly any of the deities that have not gathered together to look
upon the Tathagata. For a distance of twelve yojanas around the Sala
Grove of the Mallas in the vicinity of Kusinara there is not a spot that
could be pricked with the tip of a hair that is not filled with
powerful deities. And these deities, Ananda, are complaining: ‘From afar
have we come to look upon the Tathagata. For rare in the world is the
arising of Tathagatas, Arahants, Fully Enlightened Ones. And this day,
in the last watch of the night, the Tathagata’s Parinibbana will come
about. But this bhikkhu of great powers has placed himself right in
front of the Blessed One, concealing him, so that now, at the very end,
we are prevented from looking upon him.’ Thus, Ananda, the deities
complain.”

12-13.
“There are deities, Ananda, in space and on earth, who are
earthly-minded; with dishevelled hair they weep, with uplifted arms they
weep; flinging themselves on the ground, they roll from side to side,
lamenting: ‘Too soon has the Blessed One come to his Parinibbana! Too
soon has the Happy One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon will the Eye of
the World vanish from sight!’

14.
“But those deities who are freed from passion, mindful and
comprehending, reflect in this way: ‘Impermanent are all compounded
things. How could this be otherwise?’”

Ananda’s Concern

15.
“Formerly, Lord, on leaving their quarters after the rains, the
bhikkhus would set forth to see the Tathagata, and to us there was the
gain and benefit of receiving and associating with those very revered
bhikkhus who came to have audience with the Blessed One and to wait upon
him. But, Lord, after the Blessed One has gone, we shall no longer have
that gain and benefit.”

16. “There are four places, Ananda, that a pious person should visit and look upon with feelings of reverence.[42] What are the four?

17. “‘Here the Tathagata was born!’[43] This, Ananda, is a place that a pious person should visit and look upon with feelings of reverence.

18. “‘Here the Tathagata became fully enlightened in unsurpassed, supreme Enlightenment!’[44] This, Ananda, is a place that a pious person should visit and look upon with feelings of reverence.

19. “‘Here the Tathagata set rolling the unexcelled Wheel of the Dhamma!’[45] This, Ananda, is a place that a pious person should visit and look upon with feelings of reverence.

20.
“‘Here the Tathagata passed away into the state of Nibbana in which no
element of clinging remains!’ This, Ananda, is a place that a pious
person should visit and look upon with feelings of reverence.

21.
“These, Ananda, are the four places that a pious person should visit
and look upon with feelings of reverence. And truly there will come to
these places, Ananda, pious bhikkhus and bhikkhunis, laymen and
laywomen, reflecting: ‘Here the Tathagata was born! Here the Tathagata
became fully enlightened in unsurpassed, supreme Enlightenment! Here the
Tathagata set rolling the unexcelled Wheel of the Dhamma! Here the
Tathagata passed away into the state of Nibbana in which no element of
clinging remains!’

22.
“And whoever, Ananda, should die on such a pilgrimage with his heart
established in faith, at the breaking up of the body, after death, will
be reborn in a realm of heavenly happiness.”

23. Then the Venerable Ananda said to the Blessed One: “How, Lord, should we conduct ourselves towards women?”

“Do not see them, Ananda.”

“But, Lord, if we do see them?”

“Do not speak, Ananda.”

“But, Lord, if they should speak to us?”

“Then, Ananda, you should establish mindfulness.”

24. Then the Venerable Ananda said: “How should we act, Lord, respecting the body of the Tathagata?”

“Do
not hinder yourselves, Ananda, to honor the body of the Tathagata.
Rather you should strive, Ananda, and be zealous on your own behalf,[46]
for your own good. Unflinchingly, ardently, and resolutely you should
apply yourselves to your own good. For there are, Ananda, wise nobles,
wise brahmans, and wise householders who are devoted to the Tathagata,
and it is they who will render the honor to the body of the Tathagata.”

25. Then the Venerable Ananda said: “But how, Lord, should they act respecting the body of the Tathagata?”

“After the same manner, Ananda, as towards the body of a universal monarch.”[47]

“But how, Lord, do they act respecting the body of a universal monarch?”

26.
“The body of a universal monarch, Ananda, is first wrapped round with
new linen, and then with teased cotton wool, and so it is done up to
five hundred layers of linen and five hundred of cotton wool. When that
is done, the body of the universal monarch is placed in an iron[48]
oil vessel, which is enclosed in another iron vessel, a funeral pyre is
built of all kinds of perfumed woods, and so the body of the universal
monarch is burned; and at a crossroads a stupa is raised for the
universal monarch. So it is done, Ananda, with the body of a universal
monarch. And even, Ananda, as with the body of a universal monarch, so
should it be done with the body of the Tathagata; and at a crossroads
also a stupa should be raised for the Tathagata. And whosoever shall
bring to that place garlands or incense or sandalpaste, or pay
reverence, and whose mind becomes calm there — it will be to his well
being and happiness for a long time.

27. “There are four persons,
Ananda, who are worthy of a stupa. Who are those four? A Tathagata, an
Arahant, a Fully Enlightened One is worthy of a stupa; so also is a
Paccekabuddha,[49] and a disciple of a Tathagata, and a universal monarch.

28-31.
“And why, Ananda, is a Tathagata, an Arahant, a Fully Enlightened One
worthy of a stupa? Because, Ananda, at the thought: ‘This is the stupa
of that Blessed One, Arahant, Fully Enlightened One!’ the hearts of many
people will be calmed and made happy; and so calmed and with their
minds established in faith therein, at the breaking up of the body,
after death, they will be reborn in a realm of heavenly happiness. And
so also at the thought: ‘This is the stupa of that Paccekabuddha!’ or
‘This is the stupa of a disciple of that Tathagata, Arahant, Fully
Enlightened One!’ or ‘This is the stupa of that righteous monarch who
ruled according to Dhamma!’ — the hearts of many people are calmed and
made happy; and so calmed and with their minds established in faith
therein, at the breaking up of the body, after death, they will be
reborn in a realm of heavenly happiness. And it is because of this,
Ananda, that these four persons are worthy of a stupa.”

Ananda’s Grief

32. Then the Venerable Ananda went into the vihara[50] and leaned against the doorpost and wept: “I am still but a learner,[51]
and still have to strive for my own perfection. But, alas, my Master,
who was so compassionate towards me, is about to pass away!”

33. And the Blessed One spoke to the bhikkhus, saying: “Where, bhikkhus, is Ananda?”

“The
Venerable Ananda, Lord, has gone into the vihara and there stands
leaning against the door post and weeping: ‘I am still but a learner,
and still have to strive for my own perfection. But, alas, my Master,
who was so compassionate towards me, is about to pass away!’”

34.
Then the Blessed One asked a certain bhikkhu to bring the Venerable
Ananda to him, saying: “Go, bhikkhu, and say to Ananda, ‘Friend Ananda,
the Master calls you.’”

“So
be it, Lord.” And that bhikkhu went and spoke to the Venerable Ananda
as the Blessed One had asked him to. And the Venerable Ananda went to
the Blessed One, bowed down to him, and sat down on one side.

35.
Then the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Enough,
Ananda! Do not grieve, do not lament! For have I not taught from the
very beginning that with all that is dear and beloved there must be
change, separation, and severance? Of that which is born, come into
being, compounded, and subject to decay, how can one say: ‘May it not
come to dissolution!’? There can be no such state of things. Now for a
long time, Ananda, you have served the Tathagata with loving-kindness in
deed, word, and thought, graciously, pleasantly, with a whole heart and
beyond measure. Great good have you gathered, Ananda! Now you should
put forth energy, and soon you too will be free from the taints.”[52]

Praise of Ananda

36.
Then the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Bhikkhus, the
Blessed Ones, Arahants, Fully Enlightened Ones of times past also had
excellent and devoted attendant bhikkhus, such as I have in Ananda. And
so also, bhikkhus, will the Blessed Ones, Arahants, Fully Enlightened
Ones of times to come.

37.
“Capable and judicious is Ananda, bhikkhus, for he knows the proper
time for bhikkhus to have audience with the Tathagata, and the time for
bhikkhunis, the time for laymen and for laywomen; the time for kings and
for ministers of state; the time for teachers of other sects and for
their followers.

38. “In Ananda,
bhikkhus, are to be found four rare and superlative qualities. What are
the four? If, bhikkhus, a company of bhikkhus should go to see Ananda,
they become joyful on seeing him; and if he then speaks to them of the
Dhamma, they are made joyful by his discourse; and when he becomes
silent, they are disappointed. So it is also when bhikkhunis, laymen, or
laywomen go to see Ananda: they become joyful on seeing him; and if he
then speaks to them of the Dhamma, they are made joyful by his
discourse; and when he becomes silent, they are disappointed.

39. “In a universal
monarch, bhikkhus, are to be found four rare and superlative qualities.
What are those four? If, bhikkhus, a company of nobles should go to see
the universal monarch, they become joyful on seeing him; and if he then
speaks, they are made joyful by his talk; and when he becomes silent,
they are disappointed. So it is also when a company of brahmans, of
householders, or of ascetics goes to see a universal monarch.

40. “And in just the same way, bhikkhus, in Ananda are to be found these four rare and superlative qualities.”

The Past Glory of Kusinara

41.
When this had been said, the Venerable Ananda spoke to the Blessed One,
saying: “Let it not be, Lord, that the Blessed One should pass away in
this mean place, this uncivilized township in the midst of the jungle, a
mere outpost of the province. There are great cities, Lord, such as Campa, Rajagaha, Savatthi, Saketa, Kosambi, and Benares
— let the Blessed One have his final passing away in one of those. For
in those cities dwell many wealthy nobles and brahmans and householders
who are devotees of the Tathagata, and they will render due honor to the
remains of the Tathagata.”

42.
“Do not say that, Ananda! Do not say: ‘This mean place, this
uncivilized township in the midst of the jungle, a mere outpost of the
province.’ In times long past, Ananda, there was a king by the name of Maha Sudassana,
who was a universal monarch, a king of righteousness, a conqueror of
the four quarters of the earth, whose realm was established in security,
and who was endowed with the seven jewels.[53] And that King Maha Sudassana, Ananda, had his royal residence here at Kusinara, which was then called Kusavati, and it extended twelve yojanas from east to west, and seven from north to south.

43.
“And mighty, Ananda, was Kusavati, the capital, prosperous and well
populated, much frequented by people, and abundantly provided with food.
Just as the royal residence of the deities, Alakamanda,
is mighty, prosperous, and well populated, much frequented by deities
and abundantly provided with food, so was the royal capital of Kusavati.

44.
“Kusavati, Ananda, resounded unceasingly day and night with ten sounds —
the trumpeting of elephants, the neighing of horses, the rattling of
chariots, the beating of drums and tabours, music and song, cheers, the
clapping of hands, and cries of ‘Eat, drink, and be merry!’

Lamentation of the Mallas

45.
“Go now, Ananda, to Kusinara and announce to the Mallas: ‘Today,
Vasetthas, in the last watch of the night, the Tathagata’s Parinibbana
will take place. Approach, O Vasetthas, draw near! Do not be remorseful
later at the thought: “In our township it was that the Tathagata’s
Parinibbana took place, but we failed to see him at the end!”‘”

“So be it, Lord.” And the Venerable Ananda prepared himself, and taking bowl and robe, went with a companion to Kusinara.

46.
Now at that time the Mallas had gathered in the council hall for some
public business. And the Venerable Ananda approached them and announced:
“Today, Vasetthas, in the last watch of the night, the Tathagata’s
Parinibbana will take place. Approach, Vasetthas, draw near! Do not be
remorseful later at the thought: ‘In our township it was that the
Tathagata’s Parinibbana took place, but we failed to see him at the
end.’”

47.
When they heard the Venerable Ananda speak these words, the Mallas with
their sons, their wives, and the wives of their sons, were sorely
grieved, grieved at heart and afflicted; and some, with their hair all
dishevelled, with arms uplifted in despair, wept; flinging themselves on
the ground, they rolled from side to side, lamenting: “Too soon has the
Blessed One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Happy One come to
his Parinibbana! Too soon will the Eye of the World vanish from sight!”

48.
And thus afflicted and filled with grief, the Mallas, with their sons,
their wives, and the wives of their sons, went to the Sala Grove, the
recreation park of the Mallas, to the place where the Venerable Ananda
was.

49.
And the thought arose in the Venerable Ananda: “If I were to allow the
Mallas of Kusinara to pay reverence to the Blessed One one by one, the
night will have given place to dawn before they are all presented to
him. Therefore let me divide them up according to clan, each family in a
group, and so present them to the Blessed One thus: ‘The Malla of such
and such a name, Lord, with his wives and children, his attendants and
his friends, pays homage at the feet of the Blessed One.’”

50.
And the Venerable Ananda divided the Mallas up according to clan, each
family in a group, and presented them to the Blessed One. So it was that
the Venerable Ananda caused the Mallas of Kusinara to be presented to
the Blessed One by clans, each family in a group, even in the first
watch of the night.

The Last Convert

51. Now at that time a wandering ascetic named Subhadda
was dwelling at Kusinara. And Subhadda the wandering ascetic heard it
said: “Today in the third watch of the night, the Parinibbana of the
ascetic Gotama will take place.”

52.
And the thought arose in him: “I have heard it said by old and
venerable wandering ascetics, teachers of teachers, that the arising of
Tathagatas, Arahants, Fully Enlightened Ones, is rare in the world. Yet
this very day, in the last watch of the night, the Parinibbana of the
ascetic Gotama will take place. Now there is in me a doubt; but to this
extent I have faith in the ascetic Gotama, that he could so teach me the
Dhamma as to remove that doubt.”

53.
Then the wandering ascetic Subhadda went to the Sala Grove, the
recreation park of the Mallas, and drew near to the Venerable Ananda,
and told the Venerable Ananda his thought. And he spoke to the Venerable
Ananda, saying: “Friend Ananda, it would be good if I could be allowed
into the presence of the ascetic Gotama.”

54.
But the Venerable Ananda answered him, saying: “Enough, friend
Subhadda! Do not trouble the Tathagata. The Blessed One is weary.”

55-56.
Yet a second and a third time the wandering ascetic Subhadda made his
request, and a second and a third time the Venerable Ananda refused him.

57.
And the Blessed One heard the talk between them, and he called the
Venerable Ananda and said: “Stop, Ananda! Do not refuse Subhadda.
Subhadda, Ananda, may be allowed into the presence of the Tathagata. For
whatever he will ask me, he will ask for the sake of knowledge, and not
as an offence. And the answer I give him, that he will readily
understand.”

58.
Thereupon the Venerable Ananda said to the wandering ascetic Subhadda:
“Go then, friend Subhadda, the Blessed One gives you leave.”

59.
Then the wandering ascetic Subhadda approached the Blessed One and
saluted him courteously. And having exchanged with him pleasant and
civil greetings, the wandering ascetic Subhadda seated himself at one
side and addressed the Blessed One, saying: “There are, Venerable
Gotama, ascetics and brahmans who are heads of great companies of
disciples, who have large retinues, who are leaders of schools, well
known and renowned, and held in high esteem by the multitude, such
teachers as Purana Kassapa, Makkhali Gosala, Ajita Kesakambali, Pakudha Kaccayana, Sañjaya Belatthaputta,
Nigantha Nataputta. Have all of these attained realization, as each of
them would have it believed, or has none of them, or is it that some
have attained realization and others not?”

60.
“Enough, Subhadda! Let it be as it may, whether all of them have
attained realization, as each of them would have it believed, or whether
none of them has, or whether some have attained realization and others
not. I will teach you the Dhamma, Subhadda; listen and heed it well, and
I will speak.”

“So be it, Lord.”

The Lion’s Roar

61.
And the Blessed One spoke, saying: “In whatsoever Dhamma and
Discipline, Subhadda, there is not found the Noble Eightfold Path,
neither is there found a true ascetic of the first, second, third, or
fourth degree of saintliness. But in whatsoever Dhamma and Discipline
there is found the Noble Eightfold Path, there is found a true ascetic
of the first, second, third, and fourth degrees of saintliness.[54]
Now in this Dhamma and Discipline, Subhadda, is found the Noble
Eightfold Path; and in it alone are also found true ascetics of the
first, second, third, and fourth degrees of saintliness. Devoid of true
ascetics are the systems of other teachers. But if, Subhadda, the
bhikkhus live righteously, the world will not be destitute of arahats.

When I renounced the world to seek the Good;Fifty-one years have passed since then, Subhadda,And in all that time a wanderer have I beenIn the domain of virtue and of truth,And except therein, there is no saint(of the first degree).

“And
there is none of the second degree, nor of the third degree, nor of the
fourth degree of saintliness. Devoid of true ascetics are the systems
of other teachers. But if, Subhadda, the bhikkhus live righteously, the
world will not be destitute of arahats.”

63.
When this was said, the wandering ascetic Subhadda spoke to the Blessed
One, saying: “Excellent, O Lord, most excellent, O Lord! It is as if,
Lord, one were to set upright what had been overthrown, or to reveal
what had been hidden, or to show the path to one who had gone astray, or
to light a lamp in the darkness so that those with eyes might see —
even so has the Blessed One set forth the Dhamma in many ways. And so, O
Lord, I take my refuge in the Blessed One, the Dhamma, and the
Community of Bhikkhus. May I receive from the Blessed One admission to
the Order and also the higher ordination.”

64.
“Whoever, Subhadda, having been formerly a follower of another creed,
wishes to receive admission and higher ordination in this Dhamma and
Discipline, remains on probation for a period of four months. At the end
of those four months, if the bhikkhus are satisfied with him, they
grant him admission and higher ordination as a bhikkhu. Yet in this
matter I recognize differences of personalities.”

65.
“If, O Lord, whoever, having been formerly a follower of another creed,
wishes to receive admission and higher ordination in this Dhamma and
Discipline, remains on probation for a period of four months, and at the
end of those four months, if the bhikkhus are satisfied with him, they
grant him admission and higher ordination as a bhikkhu — then I will
remain on probation for a period of four years. And at the end of those
four years, if the bhikkhus are satisfied with me, let them grant me
admission and higher ordination as a bhikkhu.”

66.
But the Blessed One called the Venerable Ananda and said to him:
“Ananda, let Subhadda be given admission into the Order.” And the
Venerable Ananda replied: “So be it, Lord.”

67.
Then the wandering ascetic Subhadda said to the Venerable Ananda: “It
is a gain to you, friend Ananda, a blessing, that in the presence of the
Master himself you have received the sprinkling of ordination as a
disciple.”

68.So it
came about that the wandering ascetic Subhadda, in the presence of the
Blessed One, received admission and higher ordination. And from the time
of his ordination the Venerable Subhadda remained alone, secluded,
heedful, ardent, and resolute. And before
long he attained to the goal for which a worthy man goes forth rightly
from home to homelessness, the supreme goal of the holy life; and having
by himself realized it with higher knowledge, he dwelt therein. He
knew: “Destroyed is birth; the higher life is fulfilled; nothing more is
to be done, and beyond this life nothing more remains.” And the
Venerable Subhadda became yet another among the arahats, and he was the
last disciple converted by the Blessed One himself.

Part Six: The Passing Away

The Blessed One’s Final Exhortation

1.
Now the Blessed One spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “It may be,
Ananda, that to some among you the thought will come: ‘Ended is the word
of the Master; we have a Master no longer.’ But it should not, Ananda,
be so considered. For that which I have proclaimed and made known as the
Dhamma and the Discipline, that shall be your Master when I am gone.

2.
“And, Ananda, whereas now the bhikkhus address one another as ‘friend,’
let it not be so when I am gone. The senior bhikkhus, Ananda, may
address the junior ones by their name, their family name, or as
‘friend’; but the junior bhikkhus should address the senior ones as
‘venerable sir’ or ‘your reverence.’[55]

3. “If it is desired, Ananda, the Sangha may, when I am gone, abolish the lesser and minor rules.[56]

4. “Ananda, when I am gone, let the higher penalty be imposed upon the bhikkhu Channa.”[57]

“But what, Lord, is the higher penalty?”

“The
bhikkhu Channa, Ananda, may say what he will, but the bhikkhus should
neither converse with him, nor exhort him, nor admonish him.”

5.
Then the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “It may be,
bhikkhus, that one of you is in doubt or perplexity as to the Buddha,
the Dhamma, or the Sangha, the path or the practice. Then question,
bhikkhus! Do not be given to remorse later on with the thought: ‘The
Master was with us face to face, yet face to face we failed to ask
him.’”

6.
But when this was said, the bhikkhus were silent. And yet a second and a
third time the Blessed One said to them: “It may be, bhikkhus, that one
of you is in doubt or perplexity as to the Buddha, the Dhamma, or the
Sangha, the path or the practice. Then question, bhikkhus! Do not be
given to remorse later on with the thought: ‘The Master was with us face
to face, yet face to face we failed to ask him.’”

And
for a second and a third time the bhikkhus were silent. Then the
Blessed One said to them: “It may be, bhikkhus, out of respect for the
Master that you ask no questions. Then, bhikkhus, let friend communicate
it to friend.” Yet still the bhikkhus were silent.

7.
And the Venerable Ananda spoke to the Blessed One, saying: “Marvellous
it is, O Lord, most wonderful it is! This faith I have in the community
of bhikkhus, that not even one bhikkhu is in doubt or perplexity as to
the Buddha, the Dhamma, or the Sangha, the path or the practice.”

“Out
of faith, Ananda, you speak thus. But here, Ananda, the Tathagata knows
for certain that among this community of bhikkhus there is not even one
bhikkhu who is in doubt or perplexity as to the Buddha, the Dhamma, or
the Sangha, the path or the practice. For, Ananda, among these five
hundred bhikkhus even the lowest is a stream-enterer, secure from
downfall, assured, and bound for enlightenment.”

8.
And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Behold now,
bhikkhus, I exhort you: All compounded things are subject to vanish.
Strive with earnestness!”[58]

This was the last word of the Tathagata.

How the Blessed One Passed into Nibbana

9.
And the Blessed One entered the first jhana. Rising from the first
jhana, he entered the second jhana. Rising from the second jhana, he
entered the third jhana. Rising from the third jhana, he entered the
fourth jhana. And rising out of the fourth jhana, he entered the sphere
of infinite space. Rising from the attainment of the sphere of infinite
space, he entered the sphere of infinite consciousness. Rising from the
attainment of the sphere of infinite consciousness, he entered the
sphere of nothingness. Rising from the attainment of the sphere of
nothingness, he entered the sphere of
neither-perception-nor-non-perception. And rising out of the attainment
of the sphere of neither-perception-nor-non-perception, he attained to
the cessation of perception and feeling.

10. And the Venerable Ananda spoke to the Venerable Anuruddha, saying: “Venerable Anuruddha, the Blessed One has passed away.”

“No, friend Ananda, the Blessed One has not passed away. He has entered the state of the cessation of perception and feeling.”[59]

11.
Then the Blessed One, rising from the cessation of perception and
feeling, entered the sphere of neither-perception-nor-non-perception.
Rising from the attainment of the sphere of
neither-perception-nor-non-perception, he entered the sphere of
nothingness. Rising from the attainment of the sphere of nothingness, he
entered the sphere of infinite consciousness. Rising from the
attainment of the sphere of infinite consciousness, he entered the
sphere of infinite space. Rising from the attainment of the sphere of
infinite space, he entered the fourth jhana. Rising from the fourth
jhana, he entered the third jhana. Rising from the third jhana, he
entered the second jhana. Rising from the second jhana, he entered the
first jhana.

Rising
from the first jhana, he entered the second jhana. Rising from the
second jhana, he entered the third jhana. Rising from the third jhana,
he entered the fourth jhana. And, rising from the fourth jhana, the
Blessed One immediately passed away.

The World’s Echo

12.
And when the Blessed One had passed away, simultaneously with his
Parinibbana there came a tremendous earthquake, dreadful and astounding,
and the thunders rolled across the heavens.

13. And when the Blessed One had passed away, simultaneously with his Parinibbana, Brahma Sahampati[60] spoke this stanza:

All must depart—all beings that have life

Must shed their compound forms. Yea, even one,

A Master such as he, a peerless being,

Powerful in wisdom, the Enlightened One, has passed away.

14. And when the Blessed One had passed away, simultaneously with his Parinibbana, Sakka, king of the gods,[61] spoke this stanza:

Transient are all compounded things,

Subject to arise and vanish;

Having come into existence they pass away;

Good is the peace when they forever cease.

15. And when the Blessed One had passed away, simultaneously with his Parinibbana, the Venerable Anuruddha spoke this stanza:

No movement of the breath, but with steadfast heart,

Free from desires and tranquil—so the sage

Comes to his end. By mortal pangs unshaken,

His mind, like a flame extinguished, finds release.

16. And when the Blessed One had passed away, simultaneously with his Parinibbana, the Venerable Ananda spoke this stanza:

Then there was terror, and the hair stood up, when he,

The All-accomplished One, the Buddha, passed away.

17.
Then, when the Blessed One had passed away, some bhikkhus, not yet
freed from passion, lifted up their arms and wept; and some, flinging
themselves on the ground, rolled from side to side and wept, lamenting:
“Too soon has the Blessed One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the
Happy One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Eye of the World
vanished from sight!”

But
the bhikkhus who were freed from passion, mindful and clearly
comprehending, reflected in this way: “Impermanent are all compounded
things. How could this be otherwise?”

18.
And the Venerable Anuruddha addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Enough,
friends! Do not grieve, do not lament! For has not the Blessed One
declared that with all that is dear and beloved there must be change,
separation, and severance? Of that which is born, come into being,
compounded and subject to decay, how can one say: ‘May it not come to
dissolution!’? The deities, friends, are aggrieved.”

“But, venerable sir, of what deities is the Venerable Anuruddha aware?”

“There
are deities, friend Ananda, in space and on the earth who are
earthly-minded; with dishevelled hair they weep, with uplifted arms they
weep; flinging themselves on the ground, they roll from side to side,
lamenting: ‘Too soon has the Blessed One come to his Parinibbana! Too
soon has the Happy One come to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Eye of
the World vanished from sight!’ But those deities who are freed from
passion, mindful and clearly comprehending, reflect in this way:
‘Impermanent are all compounded things. How could this be otherwise?’”

19.
Now the Venerable Anuruddha and the Venerable Ananda spent the rest of
the night in talking on the Dhamma. Then the Venerable Anuruddha spoke
to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “Go now, friend Ananda, to Kusinara,
and announce to the Mallas: ‘The Blessed One, Vasetthas, has passed
away. Do now as seems fitting to you.’”

“So
be it, venerable sir.” And the Venerable Ananda prepared himself in the
forenoon, and taking bowl and robe, went with a companion into
Kusinara.

20.
At that time the Mallas of Kusinara had gathered in the council hall to
consider that very matter. And the Venerable Ananda approached them and
announced: “The Blessed One, Vasetthas, has passed away. Do now as
seems fitting to you.”

And
when they heard the Venerable Ananda speak these words, the Mallas with
their sons, their wives, and the wives of their sons, were sorely
grieved, grieved at heart and afflicted; and some, with their hair all
dishevelled, with arms upraised in despair, wept; flinging themselves on
the ground, they rolled from side to side, lamenting: “Too soon has the
Blessed One come to his Parinibbana! “Too soon has the Happy One come
to his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Eye of the World vanished from
sight!”

Homage to the Remains

21.
Then the Mallas of Kusinara gave orders to their men, saying: “Gather
now all the perfumes, flower-garlands, and musicians, even all that are
in Kusinara.” And the Mallas, with the perfumes, the flower-garlands,
and the musicians, and with five hundred sets of clothing, went to the
Sala Grove, the recreation park of the Mallas, and approached the body
of the Blessed One. And having approached, they paid homage to the body
of the Blessed One with dance, song, music, flower-garlands, and
perfume, and erecting canopies and pavilions, they spent the day showing
respect, honor, and veneration to the body of the Blessed One. And then
the thought came to them: “Now the day is too far spent for us to
cremate the body of the Blessed One. Tomorrow we will do it.”

And
for the second day, and a third, fourth, fifth, and sixth day, they
paid homage to the body of the Blessed One with dance, song, music,
flower-garlands, and perfume, and erecting canopies and pavilions, they
spent the day showing respect, honor, and veneration to the body of the
Blessed One.

But
on the seventh day the thought came to them: “We have paid homage to
the body of the Blessed One with dance, song, music, flower-garlands,
and perfume, and have shown respect, honor, and veneration; let us now
carry the body of the Blessed One southward to the southern part of the
town and beyond, and let us there cremate the body of the Blessed One
south of the town.”

And
eight Mallas of the foremost families, bathed from the crown of their
heads and wearing new clothes, with the thought: “We will lift up the
body of the Blessed One,” tried to do so but they could not.

22.
Then the Mallas spoke to the Venerable Anuruddha, saying: “What is the
cause, Venerable Anuruddha, what is the reason that these eight Mallas
of the foremost families, bathed from the crown of their heads and
wearing new clothes, with the thought: ‘We will lift up the body of the
Blessed One,’ try to do so but cannot?”

“You, Vasetthas, have one purpose, the deities have another.”

“Then what, venerable sir, is the purpose of the deities?”

“Your
purpose, Vasetthas, is this: ‘We have paid homage to the body of the
Blessed One with dance, song, music, flower-garlands, and perfume, and
have shown respect, honor, and veneration; let us now carry the body of
the Blessed One southward to the southern part of the town and beyond,
and let us there cremate the body of the Blessed One south of the town.’
But the purpose of the deities, Vasetthas, is this: ‘We have paid
homage to the body of the Blessed One with heavenly dance, song, music,
flower-garlands, and perfume, and have shown respect, honor, and
veneration; let us now carry the body of the Blessed One northward to
the northern part of the town; and having carried it through the
northern gate, let us go through the center of the town, and then
eastward to the east of the town; and having passed through the east
gate, let us carry it to the cetiya of the Mallas, Makuta-bandhana, and there let us cremate the body of the Blessed One.’”

“As the deities wish, venerable sir, so let it be.”

23. Thereupon the whole of Kusinara, even to the dust heaps and rubbish heaps, became covered knee-deep in mandarava flowers.[62]
And homage was paid to the body of the Blessed One by the deities as
well as the Mallas of Kusinara. With dance, song, music,
flower-garlands, and perfume, both divine and human, respect, honor, and
veneration were shown. And they carried the body of the Blessed One
northward to the northern part of the town; and having carried it
through the northern gate, they went through the center of the town, and
then eastward to the east of the town; and having passed through the
east gate, they carried the body of the Blessed One to the cetiya of the
Mallas, Makuta-bandhana, and there laid it down.

24.
Then the Mallas of Kusinara spoke to the Venerable Ananda, saying: “How
should we act, Venerable Ananda, respecting the body of the Tathagata?”

“After the same manner, Vasetthas, as towards the body of a universal monarch.”

“But how, venerable Ananda, do they act respecting the body of a universal monarch?”

“The
body of a universal monarch, Vasetthas, is first wrapped round with new
linen, and then with teased cotton wool. And again it is wrapped round
with new linen, and again with teased cotton wool, and so it is done up
to five hundred layers of linen and five hundred of cotton wool. When
that is done, the body of the universal monarch is placed in an iron
oil-vessel, which is enclosed in another iron vessel and a funeral pyre
is built of all kinds of perfumed woods, and so the body of the
universal monarch is burned. And at a crossroads a stupa is raised for
the universal monarch. So it is done, Vasetthas, with the body of a
universal monarch.

“And
even, Vasetthas, as with the body of a universal monarch, so should it
be done with the body of the Tathagata; and at a crossroads also a stupa
should be raised for the Tathagata. And whoever shall bring to that
place garlands or incense or sandalwood paste, or pay reverence, and
whose mind becomes calm there — it will be to his well being and
happiness for a long time.”

25.
Then the Mallas gave orders to their men, saying: “Gather now all the
teased cotton wool of the Mallas!” And the Mallas of Kusinara wrapped
the body of the Blessed One round with new linen, and then with teased
cotton wool. And again they wrapped it round with new linen, and again
with teased cotton wool, and so it was done up to five hundred layers of
linen and five hundred of cotton wool. When that was done, they placed
the body of the Blessed One in an iron oil-vessel, which was enclosed in
another iron vessel, and they built a funeral pyre of all kinds of
perfumed woods, and upon it they laid the body of the Blessed One.

26. Now at that time the Venerable Maha Kassapa[63]
was journeying from Pava to Kusinara together with a large company of
five hundred bhikkhus. And on the way, the Venerable Maha Kassapa went
aside from the highway and sat down at the foot of a tree.

And a certain Ajivaka came by, on his way to Pava, and he had taken a mandarava
flower from Kusinara. And the Venerable Maha Kassapa saw the Ajivaka
coming from a distance, and as he drew close he spoke to him, saying:
“Do you know, friend, anything of our Master?”

“Yes, friend, I know. It is now seven days since the ascetic Gotama passed away. From there I have brought this mandarava flower.”

27.
Thereupon some bhikkhus, not yet freed from passion, lifted up their
arms and wept; and some, flinging themselves on the ground, rolled from
side to side and wept, lamenting: “Too soon has the Blessed One come to
his Parinibbana! Too soon has the Happy One come to his Parinibbana! Too
soon has the Eye of the World vanished from sight!”

28. Now at that time, one Subhadda, who had renounced only in his old age, was seated in the assembly.[64]
And he addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Enough, friends! Do not grieve,
do not lament! We are well rid of that great ascetic. Too long,
friends, have we been oppressed by his saying: ‘This is fitting for you;
that is not fitting for you.’ Now we shall be able to do as we wish,
and what we do not wish, that we shall not do.”

But
the Venerable Maha Kassapa addressed the bhikkhus, saying: “Enough
friends! Do not grieve, do not lament! For has not the Blessed One
declared that with all that is dear and beloved there must be change,
separation, and severance? Of that which is born, come into being,
compounded, and subject to decay, how can one say: ‘May it not come to
dissolution!’?”

29.
Now at that time four Mallas of the foremost families, bathed from the
crown of their heads and wearing new clothes, with the thought: “We will
set alight the Blessed One’s pyre,” tried to do so but they could not.
And the Mallas spoke to the Venerable Anuruddha, saying: “What is the
cause, Venerable Anuruddha, what is the reason that these four Mallas of
the foremost families, bathed from the crown of their heads and wearing
new clothes, with the thought: “We will set alight the Blessed One’s
pyre,’ try to do so but cannot?”

“You, Vasetthas, have one purpose, the deities have another.”

“Then what, venerable sir, is the purpose of the deities?”

“The
purpose of the deities, Vasetthas, is this: ‘The Venerable Maha Kassapa
is on his way from Pava to Kusinara together with a large company of
five hundred bhikkhus. Let not the Blessed One’s pyre be set alight
until the Venerable Maha Kassapa has paid homage at the feet of the
Blessed One.’”

“As the deities wish, venerable sir, so let it be.”

30.
And the Venerable Maha Kassapa approached the pyre of the Blessed One,
at the cetiya of the Mallas, Makuta-bandhana, in Kusinara. And he
arranged his upper robe on one shoulder, and with his clasped hands
raised in salutation, he walked three times round the pyre, keeping his
right side towards the Blessed One’s body, and he paid homage at the
feet of the Blessed One. And even so did the five hundred bhikkhus.

And
when homage had been paid by the Venerable Maha Kassapa and the five
hundred bhikkhus, the pyre of the Blessed One burst into flame by
itself.

31.
And it came about that when the body of the Blessed One had been
burned, no ashes or particles were to be seen of what had been skin,
tissue, flesh, sinews, and fluid; only bones remained. Just as when ghee
or oil is burned, it leaves no particles or ashes behind, even so when
the body of the Blessed One had been burned, no ashes or particles were
to be seen of what had been skin, tissue, flesh, sinews, and fluid; only
bones remained. And of the five hundred linen wrappings, only two were
not consumed, the innermost and the outermost.

32.
And when the body of the Blessed One had been burned, water rained down
from heaven and extinguished the pyre of the Blessed One, and from the
sala trees water came forth, and the Mallas of Kusinara brought water
scented with many kinds of perfumes, and they too extinguished the pyre
of the Blessed One.

And
the Mallas of Kusinara laid the relics of the Blessed One in their
council hall, and surrounded them with a lattice-work of spears and
encircled them with a fence of bows; and there for seven days they paid
homage to the relics of the Blessed One with dance, song, music,
flower-garlands, and perfume, and showed respect, honor, and veneration
to the relics of the Blessed One.

33.
Then the king of Magadha, Ajatasattu, son of the Videhi queen, came to
know that at Kusinara the Blessed One had passed away. And he sent a
message to the Mallas of Kusinara, saying: “The Blessed One was of the
warrior caste, and I am too. I am worthy to receive a portion of the
relics of the Blessed One. I will erect a stupa over the relics of the
Blessed One and hold a festival in their honor.”

34.
And the Licchavis of Vesali came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed
One had passed away. And they sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara,
saying: “The Blessed One was of the warrior caste, and we are too. We
are worthy to receive a portion of the relics of the Blessed One. We
will erect a stupa over the relics of the Blessed One and hold a
festival in their honor.”

35. And the Sakyas
of Kapilavatthu came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed One had
passed away. And they sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara, saying:
“The Blessed One was the greatest of our clan. We are worthy to receive a
portion of the relics of the Blessed One. We will erect a stupa over
the relics of the Blessed One and hold a festival in their honor.”

36. And the Bulis of Allakappa
came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed One had passed away. And they
sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara, saying: “The Blessed One was
of the warrior caste, and we are too. We are worthy to receive a portion
of the relics of the Blessed One. We will erect a stupa over the relics
of the Blessed One and hold a festival in their honor.”

37. And the Kolis of Ramagama
came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed One had passed away. And they
sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara, saying: “The Blessed One was
of the warrior caste, and we are too. We are worthy to receive a portion
of the relics of the Blessed One. We will erect a stupa over the relics
of the Blessed One and hold a festival in their honor.”

38. And the Vethadipa
brahman came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed One had passed away.
And he sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara, saying: “The Blessed
One was of the warrior caste, and I am a brahman. I am worthy to receive
a portion of the relics of the Blessed One. I will erect a stupa over
the relics of the Blessed One and hold a festival in their honor.”

39.
And the Mallas of Pava came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed One
had passed away. And they sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara,
saying: “The Blessed One was of the warrior caste, and we are too. We
are worthy to receive a portion of the relics of the Blessed One. We
will erect a stupa over the relics of the Blessed One and hold a
festival in their honor.”

40.
But when they heard these words, the Mallas of Kusinara addressed the
assembly, saying: “The Blessed One has passed away in our township. We
shall not part with any portion of the relics of the Blessed One.” Then
the brahman Dona spoke to the assembly, saying:

And
the brahman Dona said to the assembly: “So be it, sirs.” And he divided
justly into eight equal portions the relics of the Blessed One, and
having done so, he addressed the assembly, saying: “Let this urn, sirs,
be given to me. Over this urn I will erect a stupa, and in its honor I
will hold a festival.” And the urn was given to the brahman Dona.

41. Then the Moriyas of Pipphalivana
came to know that at Kusinara the Blessed One had passed away. And they
sent a message to the Mallas of Kusinara, saying: “The Blessed One was
of the warrior caste, and we are too. We are worthy to receive a portion
of the relics of the Blessed One. We will erect a stupa over the relics
of the Blessed One and hold a festival in their honor.”

“There
is no portion of the relics of the Blessed One remaining; the relics of
the Blessed One have been divided. But take from here the ashes.” And
they took from there the ashes.

42.
And the king of Magadha, Ajatasattu, son of the Videhi queen, erected a
stupa over the relics of the Blessed One at Rajagaha, and in their
honor held a festival. The Licchavis of Vesali erected a stupa over the
relics of the Blessed One at Vesali, and in their honor held a festival.
The Sakyas of Kapilavatthu erected a stupa over the relics of the
Blessed One at Kapilavatthu, and in their honor held a festival. The
Bulis of Allakappa erected a stupa over the relics of the Blessed One at
Allakappa, and in their honor held a festival. The Kolis of Ramagama
erected a stupa over the relics of the Blessed One at Ramagama, and in
their honor held a festival. The Vethadipa brahman erected a stupa over
the relics of the Blessed One at Vethadipa, and in their honor held a
festival. The Mallas of Pava erected a stupa over the relics of the
Blessed One at Pava, and in their honor held a festival. The Mallas of
Kusinara erected a stupa over the relics of the Blessed One at Kusinara,
and in their honor held a festival. The brahman Dona erected a stupa
over the urn, and in its honor held a festival. And the Moriyas of
Pipphalivana erected a stupa over the ashes at Pipphalivana, and in
their honor held a festival.

So it came about that there were eight stupas for the relics, a ninth for the urn, and a tenth for the ashes.

Ajatasattu Vedehiputta. Comy. says that Ajatasattu’s mother was a Kosala princess and not the daughter of the Vedehi king. Hence Comy. explains vedehiputta
as “son of a wise mother.” Ajatasattu became king of the powerful state
of Magadha after murdering his father, King Bimbisara (see DN 2).

Ananda
was a cousin of the Buddha and his personal attendant for twenty-four
years. He attained arahatship after the passing away of the Buddha, just
before the commencement of the First Council, at which he was the
reciter of the Digha Nikaya and the authority for the Sutta Pitaka.

The group-names, which are not in the original, are supplied from other references to the qualities concerned; here satta saddhamma,
about which see AN 7.63; MN 53. In the Comy. to MN 8 they are called
“the complete equipment required for insight” (BPS Wheel No. 61/62,
p.48).

Virtue (sila), concentration (samadhi), and wisdom (pañña)
are the three divisions of the Noble Eightfold Path. Our text stresses
again and again the importance of a full development of all three for
final liberation.

Asava:
those defiling factors — sensual desire, craving for existence, and
ignorance — primarily responsible for maintaining bondage to the cycle
of rebirths. Also translated as “cankers” or “corruptions.” Later texts
add a fourth, the taint of wrong views.

Sariputta
was the chief disciple of the Buddha and the one who excelled in
wisdom. For a full account of the life and works or this illustrious
individual, see Nyanaponika Thera, The Life of Sariputta (BPS Wheel No. 90/92).

Evam-dhamma. Comy. & Sub. Comy.: This refers to concentration and to the mental qualities belonging to concentration (samadhipakkhiya dhamma) such as energy, mindfulness, etc. Comy. explains “abiding” (vihara) as abiding in the attainment of cessation (nirodha-samapatti).

Puta-bhedanam. Comy. explains as the breaking open, the unpacking, of boxes (puta) of merchandise for the purpose of distribution. But probably it refers to the bursting open of the seed-box of the patali flower.

The
stage of arahatship, the last of the four stages of deliverance. The
next three paragraphs refer to disciples on the three lower stages,
respectively, the non-returner, once-returner, and stream-enterer (anagami, sakadagami, sotapanna).

Animitta cetosamadhi. Comy. explains this term here as referring to the fruition-attainment of arahatship (phalasamapatti),
in which the Buddha becomes absorbed in the direct experience of
Nibbana and no longer attends to external objects or feels mundane
feelings. In another context it can mean the concentration developed by
intensive insight.

Tamatagge: a difficult word. Comy. takes it to stand for the superlative form, aggatama, “highest,” but alludes also to the Pali word tama,
“darkness.” It is rather difficult to accept that a superlative suffix
should be made to precede the word it qualifies. Tibetan and Chinese
parallels (Waldschmidt, Das Mahaparinirvana-sutra Berlin,
1950-51) pp. 200 ff.) point to a meaning as “the highest.” In the
fragments of the Turfan Sanskrit version, these words are not preserved.
Comy. says: “Tamatagge = tama-agge; the ‘t’ in the middle is inserted for euphonic reasons. The meaning is: these are the very highest, the most eminent (ime aggatama tamatagga). Having cut every bondage of darkness (tama-yoga), those bhikkhus of mine will be on the very top, in the highest rank (ativiya agge uttamabhave). Among them those will be on the very summit (ati-agge) who are desirous of training; and those whose resort is the four foundations of mindfulness will be at the very top of them.”

Comy.: “He may stay alive completing the life span pertaining to men at the given time. (Sub. Comy.: the maximum life span.) Kappavasesa: ‘in excess’ (atireka), i.e., more or less above the hundred years said to be the normally highest life expectation.”

Among the numerous meanings of the word kappa, there is, in fact, that of time in general (kala)
and not only the duration of an aeon; but the meaning “life span” seems
to have been ascribed to it only in this passage. Also, the meaning “in
excess” for avasesa (usually “remainder”) is unusual.

The four constituents of psychic power (iddhipada) are concentration due to zeal, energy, purity of mind, and investigation.

“Convincing and liberating.” This stands for the one Pali word sappatihariya,
an attempt to render the two connotations which the word has according
to the commentaries and in the context of other occurrences in the
Canon. The commentaries derive it from the verb patiharati, “to
remove,” and explain it as (1) the removal of what is adverse, e.g.,
opposition and objections (covered by “convincing”), and (2) the removal
of inner obstructions, i.e., defilements such as greed, etc., effected
by arahatship. It is probably to point to that latter meaning that the
commentary to our present text paraphrases our passage as follows:
“until they are able to preach the Teaching in its liberating (niyyanika) capacity.”

Kavacam iv’attasambhavam.
Comy.: “He breaks through the entire net of defilements that envelops
individual existence like a coat of mail; he breaks the defilements as a
great warrior breaks his armor after a battle.” The Sanskrit version
has “like an egg shell” (kosam iv’ anda-sambhavam).

Comy.:
“Even by this much the Venerable Ananda was aware of the fact: ‘Surely,
today the Blessed One has renounced his will to live on.’ Though the
Blessed One knew that the Venerable Ananda was aware of it, he did not
give him another opportunity to ask him to stay on for the remainder of
his life span, but he spoke to him about other eight-term groups
beginning with the eight assemblies.” Sub. Comy.: “Some say that the
Buddha did so in order to divert the Venerable Ananda and to prevent
grief from arising in him.”

In the earlier edition of this work, mahapadesa was rendered as “great authorities.” It is now known that the proper meaning of apadesa
is not “authority,” but “reference” or “source.” Besides, from the
passage it is clear that there are only two real “authorities” — the
Discourses (Suttas) and the Discipline (Vinaya).

Sukara-maddava: a controversial term which has therefore been left untranslated. Sukara = pig; maddava = soft, tender, delicate. Hence two alternative renderings of the compound are possible: (1) the tender parts of a pig or boar; (2) what is enjoyed by
pigs and boars. In the latter meaning, the term has been thought to
refer to a mushroom or truffle, or a yam or tuber. K.E. Neumann, in the
preface to his German translation of the Majjhima Nikaya, quotes from an
Indian compendium of medicinal plants, the Rajanigantu, several plants beginning with sukara.

The
commentary to our text gives three alternative explanations: (1) the
flesh from a single first-born (wild) pig, neither too young nor too
old, which had come to hand naturally, i.e., without intentional
killing; (2) a preparation of soft boiled rice cooked with the five
cow-products; (3) a kind of alchemistic elixir (rasayanavidhi). Dhammapala, in his commentary to Udana VIII.5, gives, in addition, young bamboo shoots trampled by pigs (sukarehi maddita-vamsakaliro).

Comy.: “From the town of Pava it is three gavutas
(approx. five miles) to Kusinara. Walking that distance with great
effort and sitting down at twenty-five places on the way, the Blessed
One reached the Sala Grove at dusk when the sun had already set. Thus
comes illness to man, crushing all his health. As if he wanted to point
to this fact, the Blessed One spoke those words which deeply moved the
whole world: ‘I am weary, Ananda, and want to lie down.’”

Paccekabuddha is one awakened or enlightened for himself alone. Such Paccekabuddhas arise at times when there is no Fully Enlightened One (samma-sambuddha).
Like the latter, they attain to Enlightenment by their own effort, but
unlike them are not able to lead others to deliverance. See Ria
Kloppenberg, The Paccekabuddha: A Buddhist Ascetic (BPS Wheel No. 305/307).

The word vihara, given in the text, cannot refer here to a monastery or monks’ living quarters. Comy. explains it as a pavilion (mandala-mala).
If the locality was used as a meeting place for the clan, as Comy.
states, there may well have been a kind of shelter there. The couch in
the open, which Ananda was asked to prepare for the Master, was probably
a seat for the chiefs of the Malla clan put up at that place.

The
“seven jewels” of a universal monarch are: the magical wheel, emblem of
his sovereignty, by which he conquers the earth without the use of
force; his wonderful elephant; his horse; his beautiful wife; his
precious gem; his treasurer; and his advisor. All are endowed with
wondrous properties. For more on Maha Sudassana, see the sutta which
bears his name, DN 17.

Channa
had been the Buddha’s charioteer while the latter was still a prince
living in the palace. Because of his prior connection with the Buddha,
he was obdurate and refused to submit to discipline. This imposition of
the “higher penalty” (brahmadanda) changed him into an obedient monk.

Handa dani bhikkhave amantayami vo: Vayadhamma sankhara appamadena sampadetha. Earnestness (appamada)
is explained as “presence of mindfulness.” Comy.: “‘You should
accomplish all your duties without allowing mindfulness to lapse!’ Thus
did the Blessed One, while on the bed of his Parinibbana, summarize in
that one word on earnestness the advice he had given through forty-five
years.”

A
celestial flower which appears on earth only on special occasions,
particularly in connection with the chief events in the life of the
Buddha. Its appearance in the hands of the Ajivaka ascetic signaled to
the Venerable Maha Kassapa that the Buddha’s Parinibbana had already
taken place. (See below, Section 26.)

He
was one of the foremost disciples of the Buddha and became the
president of the First Great Council held shortly after the Buddha’s
Parinibbana. See Helmuth Hecker, Maha Kassapa: Father of the Sangha (BPS Wheel No. 345).